This volume is a product of the staff of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The
World Bank. The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this work. The
findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this paper do not necessarily reflect the views of the
Executive Directors of the World Bank or the governments they represent.
The material in this publication is copyrighted.
FINANCIAL SECTOR ASSESSMENT PROGRAM
BRAZIL
IOSCO OBJECTIVES AND PRINCIPLES OF SECURITIES REGULATION
DETAILED ASSESSMENT OF
IMPLEMENTATION JUNE 2013 (REVISED)1
INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND MONETARY AND CAPITAL MARKETS DEPARTMENT
THE WORLD BANK FINANCIAL AND PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
VICE PRESIDENCY LATIN AMERICA & THE CARIBBEAN REGION
VICE PRESIDENCY
1 The assessment was prepared and delivered in March 2012, but was subsequently revised on the basis of
comments and additional information received.
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Contents Page
Glossary .....................................................................................................................................3
I. Summary, Key Findings, and Recommendations ..................................................................5 Institutional and market structure—overview ...................................................6 Preconditions for effective securities regulation................................................9 Main Findings ..................................................................................................10 Recommended action plan and authorities’ response ......................................24
II. Detailed Assessment ...........................................................................................................29
Tables
1B. Summary Implementation of the IOSCO Principles—Detailed Assessments ..................14 2. Recommended Action Plan to Improve Implementation of the IOSCO Principles ............22 3. Detailed Assessment of Implementation of the IOSCO Principles .....................................29
3
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
ABRASCA Brazil Public Corporations Association
Anbima Brazilian Financial and Capital Markets Association
ANCORD National Association of Security Brokers, Exchange and Commodities
APIMEC Association of Investment Analysts and Capital Markets
AUM Assets under management
BCB Banco Central do Brasil—Central Bank
BCP Basel Core Principles
BDR Brazilian Depository Receipts
BNDES Banco Nacional de Desenvolvimiento Economico e Social
National Bank for Economic and Social Development
Bovespa BM&F Bovespa Stock Exchange
BSM BM&F Bovespa regulatory subsidiary
CAR Capital Adequacy Ratio
CBLC BM&F Bovespa central counterparty subsidiary
CCP Central counterparty
CD Certificate of Deposit
CDI Certificado de Deposito Interbancario—Interbank Certificate of Deposit
CETIP Central de Custodia e de Liquidação Financiera de Títulos—
Central Custodian and Settlement of Financial Securities
CF Committee Fiscal
CFC Federal Accountancy Profession Organization – Conselho Federal de
Contabilidade
CGR CVM Risk Management Committee
CGU Office of the Comptroller General
CIR CVM Risk Identification Committee
CIS Collective investment schemes (mutual funds)
CMN Conselho Monetário Nacional / National Monetary Council
CNSP National Council of Private Insurance
COREMEC Committee of Regulation and Supervision of Financial, Securities,
Insurance, and Complementary Pension
COMEF Financial Stability Committee
CPC Comitê de Pronunciamentos Contábeis – Brazil Accounting Standards
Setter
CPSIPS Core Principles for Systemically Important Payment Systems
CPSS Committee on Payment and Settlement Systems
CRE Administration Committee of External Quality Review
CRI Real Estate Receivables Certificates
CRSFN National Financial System Appeal Council
CVM Comissão de Valores Mobiliários – Brazil Securities Commission
DFP Standardized Financial Statement Form
DI Interbank Deposit
DvP Delivery Versus Payment
ELA Emergency Liquidity Assistance
FACPC Foundation for CPC Support
4
FEBRECAN Brazil Banking Association
FIDC Fundo de Investimento em Direitos Creditorios—Receivables Banked
Investment Funds
FX Foreign Exchange
GDP Gross Domestic Product
IAS International Accounting Standards
IBRACON Institute of Independent Auditors of Brazil
ICAAP Internal Capital Adequacy Assessment Process
IFRS International Financial Reporting Standards
IMF International Monetary Fund
IOSCO International Organization of Securities Commissions
IPE CVM Periodical and Non-Recurrent Information System
IPO Initial Public Offering
ITG Intra Group Transaction
MCR BSM Bovespa Investor Compensation Mechanism
MMOU IOSCO Multilateral Memorandum of Understanding
MOF Fazenda—Ministry of Finance
MOPBM Ministry of Planning, Budget, and Management
NAV Net Asset Value
NM Novo Mercado
NPL Nonperforming Loans
OTC Over-the-Counter
P/E Price Earnings Ratio
PREVIC Superintendência de Previdência Complementar – Superintendency of
Complementary Pensions
RAET Temporary Special Administrative Regime of the BCB
ROA Return on Assets
ROE Return on Equity
RTGS Real Time Gross Settlement
SBR CVM risk-based supervision system
SME Small and Medium Enterprise
SUMEF Subcommittee to Monitor the Stability of the National Financial System
SUSEP Superintendence of Private Insurance
TC termo de compromisso / CVM enforcement settlement process
TCU Brazil Court of Audit
5
I. SUMMARY, KEY FINDINGS, AND RECOMMENDATIONS
Introduction
1. The CVM has made substantial progress since the 2002 FSAP. In 2002 the
IOSCO assessment rated 8 principles fully implemented and 22 principles partly
implemented. The 2012 Assessment rates 26 principles fully implemented, 5 broadly
implemented, and 6 partly implemented. Principle 38 is not rated, as a separate ROSC on
systemically important payment systems was conducted as part of this FSAP Update. The
detailed assessment highlights significant improvements in the risk-based inspection
program, adoption of an innovative issuer disclosure system, a stronger enforcement program
and the adoption of IFRS. Long-standing issues on corporate governance and the protection
of minority shareholders continue to be challenges. Finally, recommendations to improve
prudential regulation of C.I.S. are discussed and proposed.
Information and methodology used for assessment
2. This assessment was conducted as part of a full FSAP update mission, in March 2012.
The assessment applies the latest IOSCO Objectives and Principles of Securities Regulation,
as adopted by IOSCO in 2010. The IOSCO Methodology For Assessing Implementation of
the IOSCO Objectives and Principles, dated September 2011 was used as a benchmark
reference for assessing implementation. This assessment is based on extensive interviews
with staff of the Brazil CVM, a self-assessment prepared by CVM staff, supporting
information provided by the CVM, and a review of applicable laws and important CVM
Instructions (regulations) that are translated into English and available on the CVM website.
The CVM self-assessment was revised at the completion of the mission and the CVM
supplemented it with detailed comments provided in April, May and June 2012.
3. Because the Central Bank of Brazil (BCB) is the prudential regulator for financial
intermediaries in Brazil (broker-dealers), the assessment of several principles required an
assessment of how the BCB functions as a prudential regulator of the applicable financial
intermediaries. Accordingly the assessment of principles 1 – 5 is based on an assessment of
implementation at the CVM and the BCB. This analysis is based upon interviews with BCB
staff, and a limited review of applicable laws and BCB Rules and CMN Resolutions. As most
of the pertinent BCB Rules and CMN Resolutions are not available in English translations,
this assessment placed a heavy reliance on the BCP assessment conducted under this FSAP
and the excellent assistance provided by the BCP assessors.
4. The assessment also reflects numerous interviews with persons in the financial
services sector in Brazil, including officials of the BM&F Bovespa securities market, as well
as persons at Anbima, the organization of banks and investment firms in Brazil that performs
a variety of self-regulatory functions, and officials of the CRE, which plays a role in the
licensing and regulation of audit professionals. A wide array of published research on
Brazil’s capital markets, economy and regulatory structure is available on the Internet and
much of it was reviewed during the course of the assessment. The IOSCO assessment
6
conducted in 2002 proved to be a useful historical document and valuable benchmark in
assessing the progress made during the past decade.
5. The assessment was conducted by Jonathan Katz, an attorney in the United States
who served as Secretary of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for 20 years, until
his retirement in 2006. Mr. Katz has served as an IOSCO assessor on several other FSAP
missions.
Institutional and market structure—overview
6. Since the last FSAP in 2002, Brazil’s economy and financial system have grown
in size, strength and sophistication. Financial system asset holdings doubled in the last
decade to 181 percent of GDP in 2011. Financial conglomerates are the key feature of the
system, controlling ¾ of the assets, with two-thirds of banking assets held by the top five
banks (and about 40 percent by government-owned banks). Assets held by institutional
investors rose by 60 percentage points of GDP.
7. Short-term interest rates are well above those in countries with similar levels of
development and macroeconomic stability and this affects the capital market. Most
financial contracts among residents are indexed to the overnight interest rate. This
equilibrium reflects long-standing fundamental factors, including the low level of domestic
savings and the legacy of high inflation and low policy credibility in the past. It has pervasive
implications on financial sector structure, stability, and long-term development.
8. The Brazilian equity market made impressive gains in market capitalization and
liquidity over the past decade. Total equity market capitalization is about 55 percent of
GDP and compares well with countries at similar levels of development and size. This
growth has been fueled by a combination of strong market performance and a steady growth
in the total quantity of shares, through a combination of IPOs, and follow-on offerings.
Market liquidity has also improved considerably over the same period. However, the market
valuation of Brazil is low when compared to other Latin American markets. The MSCI
Brazil index trades at a price/earnings (P/E) ratio of 9.4 times 2012 earnings estimates. By
comparison Mexico trades at 14 times 2012 earnings estimates and Chile at 14.2.
9. Even after a decade of IPOs and follow on offerings, the Brazilian equity market
still has a small number of listings. Following a record 76 offerings (IPO and follow on) in
2007, the number of offerings in the past three years has stabilized at lower levels (around 22
per year). The pace of IPO activity has been insufficient to raise the number of listings (382)
to levels commensurate with Brazil’s GDP per capita and size total number of listed
companies. Also, the mix of companies on Bovespa is not reflective of the overall Brazilian
economy. For example the commodities sector represents only 20 percent of the Brazilian
economy but nearly 50 percent of the Bovespa index.
7
10. Foreign institutional investors have been critical to IPOs and follow-on offerings.
Between 2004-2011 foreigners purchased on average 69 percent of IPOs and 59 percent of
follow on offerings. Typically the offering is a Brazilian listing, with a substantial block of
the registered Brazilian offering sold to foreign investors in U.S. and Europe as a U.S. SEC
Reg S/Rule 144A private offering. Because Brazilian companies can reach foreign investors,
the creation of ADR/GDRs by Brazilian companies has declined dramatically. Since 2004
only five ADRS have been created in 100 IPOs.
11. Foreign investors are a significant component of the Brazilian secondary market
as well. Foreigners are the largest component of the Brazilian secondary market, with
37 percent of daily trading. Foreigners are also the largest lender of securities (42 percent of
lending) and are second only to mutual funds as borrowers of securities (21 percent
compared to 70 percent).
12. Institutional investors in Brazil, including pension funds and mutual funds, have
not been substantial investors in the equity markets. Combined, they account for only one
third of market capitalization. Mutual fund AUM invested in equities is well below 20
percent of total AUM. Mutual funds managed by the four largest banks have equity
investments ranging from 5 percent to 17 percent. The low level of equity investment has
likely been a consequence of the high returns on government debt, making higher risk equity
investments less attractive. This environment could change significantly in the near future, if
interest rates on government securities decline. The growth of pension funds operating
defined contribution plans under a lifecycle approach could also stimulate greater demand for
equity (see below). If the absolute amount of domestic investment in the equity market
increases significantly, it could result in higher valuations that might encourage a greater
number of companies to go public.
13. The mutual fund industry has AUM of almost 50 percent of GDP. This figure
may be somewhat deceiving as pension funds invest heavily through mutual funds. Mutual
fund AUM also includes corporations that use money market mutual funds for cash
management purposes (16 percent of AUM). Retail investors (17 percent of AUM) also use
mutual funds for short-term money management. As a result mutual fund AUM is heavily
weighted in short-term debt investments, particularly overnight repos (20 percent of total
AUM). Low liquidity in the secondary market for Government debt and the scarcity of
money market instruments likely influences the heavy reliance on repos.
14. The creation of the Novo Mercado, with its higher standards for corporate
governance and minority shareholder protection, contributed to the growth of the
Brazilian equity market. In the period 2009-2011, 25 of 28 IPOs were listed on the Novo
Mercado (N.M.). The number of Bovespa N.M. listed companies has grown from 44 in 2005
to 125 in 2011. Over the same period Level 1 listings grew from 37 to 38 and Level 2 listings
increased from 14 to 19. While the number of traditional listings has remained largely flat,
8
these companies represent 66% of total listed market cap and 76% of total traded value on
Bovespa.
15. Since the 2001 amendments to the Company Law and the adoption of the higher
listing standards for N.M. and Levels I and II, efforts to make further improvements in
corporate governance through enhanced Bovespa listing standards have been limited.
In 2010 a package of recommendations was prepared and submitted to a vote of N.M.
companies (required to effect changes). While some of the proposals in the package were
approved (discussed in Core Principle 17), three key changes were rejected: (1) An increase
in the proportion of independent board members from 20 to 30% for Novo Mercado and
Level 2 listed companies and the addition of an independent director requirement for Level 1
listed companies; (2) A requirement for an audit committee comprised of a minimum of three
members elected by the Board of Directors, of whom at least one must be an independent
board member; and (3) A significant change in the takeover rules to require a mandatory bid
after a shareholder acquires 30% of outstanding shares (down from 50%).
16. The limited legal protections for minority investors in the Corporation Law have
not been changed. Many major corporations in Brazil are not listed on the N.M. or Levels I
or II. As such they continue to adhere to the governance standards of the Corporation Law.
This means that the corporate board of directors likely has none or one nominally
independent director and no board audit committee to monitor the sufficiency of externally
audited financial statements. They also may have more than one class of equity shares, with
as much as 1/2 of total shares being non-voting shares. Companies listed on the traditional
Bovespa or Level I have limited “tag along” rights for non-voting shares in the event of a
company takeover.
17. The consolidation of the Brazilian securities markets into a single, for-profit
company appears to have strengthened the Brazilian secondary markets. It has also
created regulatory challenges for the CVM. The 2008 consolidation of secondary markets
into BM&F Bovespa strengthened market liquidity, reduced fragmentation and improved
infrastructure. Conversely, the consolidation into a single secondary market that is a for-
profit publicly traded company has raised concerns about high transaction costs and restricted
entry by potential competitors. The CVM has recognized the importance of taking a
leadership role in examining the shape of the Brazilian secondary markets. It commissioned
an independent study of the Brazilian secondary market, due in April 2012.
18. The derivatives market in Brazil is one of the ten largest in the world. However it
is heavily concentrated in the interbank deposit interest rate future (DI) and foreign currency
derivatives. As with the equity market, foreign investors play a significant role in the DI
futures market, particularly as the purchasers of interest rate risk.
19. The private debt market is beginning to grow from a historically low base. The
stock of private debt securities issued by non-financial companies has risen from 7 percent of
9
GDP in 2006 to 11 percent in 2011. While maturity has been lengthening to an average of
about 6 years, duration continues to be very short. The CVM has adopted, through
Instruction 487, an expedited non-registered offering process to facilitate the private debt
market.
20. Brazil has a universal banking sector and broker-dealer/ financial
intermediaries are largely subsidiaries of the largest banks. The three largest firms are
subsidiaries of Brazilian banks and control over 60 percent of assets. Virtually the entire
industry is represented by the ten largest firms. The BCB is the prudential regulator of the
sector. It applies the same licensing and capital adequacy standards to banks and
intermediaries. BCB requires consolidated reporting for the banking conglomerate. The
CVM is the business conduct regulator and the sole regulator for a range of retail
intermediaries which are not subject to prudential risk regulation.
Preconditions for effective securities regulation
21. The legal framework for creditor / debtor relationships has improved in the past
decade but shortcomings remain. In conjunction with this FSAP Update, ROSCs were
performed on Insolvency and Creditor Rights, Accounting and Auditing, and Corporate
Governance. The Insolvency and Creditor Rights (ICR) ROSC found several noteworthy
improvements in the legal and regulatory infrastructure. “The Law on Business
Reorganization and Bankruptcy of 2005 improved the insolvency system, with the
reorganization procedure (recuperação) working better than the liquidation proceeding
(falência). However, there are elements in the framework that need further development to
make it a more effective tool. The tax treatment of debt write-offs is not neutral and operates
as a disincentive to debt restructuring. Upon reorganization commencement, new financing is
almost impossible to obtain because of prudential requirements on and legal uncertainty over
the priority of claims of new money. Legal uncertainties over personal liabilities deter
creditor participation in insolvency proceedings; it should be clarified that fraud is required
to adjudge the creditor personally liable. Further, some important issues are not contemplated
in the insolvency law (enterprise groups and cross-border insolvency cases) and eligibility
rules could also be reviewed to encompass important sectors (cooperatives, mixed-capital
companies, health care plan companies and others) that hitherto lack access to an effective
mechanism of restructuring or insolvency liquidation.”
22. The institutional framework supporting credit enforcement and insolvency could
be improved. The ICR ROSC concluded that the specialized courts in Rio de Janeiro and
Sao Paulo are generally satisfactory but the backlog of cases is significant (e.g., in Sao Paulo
about 1000 cases per lower court) indicative that more resources are necessary for a fully
efficient treatment of insolvency cases.
10
Main Findings
23. Principles relating to the regulator (P. 1-8). The CVM has clearly defined authority
to regulate business conduct in the Brazilian capital markets. This authority does not extend
to regulating business conduct and investor protection in the purchase and sale of Brazilian
sovereign debt. BCB has exclusive responsibility for prudential regulation, including capital
adequacy standards, systemic risk and resolution of intermediaries, and secondary market
clearance, settlement and payment functions. The CVM Board members have fixed term
appointments and the Board members and staff have adequate legal protection in the
performance of their duties. While the CVM has obtained increases in its staffing resources
in recent years, more resources are required and it still lacks a stable flow of funding.
Brazilian civil service appointment procedures may be a significant impediment in the
recruitment and retention of staff with critical skills and relevant experience. CVM and BCB
share licensing responsibilities. CVM is a member of COREMEC, a regulatory working
group under the supervision of the CMN that is responsible for monitoring cross-regulatory
issues, systemic risk, and emerging aspects of the financial sector that may not be adequately
supervised under existing regulatory policies.
24. Principles of Self-Regulation (P. 9). The Brazilian Securities Act establishes
criteria for registration of self-regulatory organizations and the BM&F Bovespa and the
CETIP are official SROs subject to oversight by the CVM. Bovespa has created BSM as a
wholly owned regulatory subsidiary and CETIP has created a separate internal department
responsible for regulatory functions. CVM annually reviews the work plan and budget of
these regulatory programs. It also receives weekly and monthly activity reports and conducts
periodic on-site inspections. Brazil also has several other private member-created and
supported organizations that are constituted as professional or trade associations but perform
some self-regulatory functions, with some or no official oversight by the CVM. Anbima is a
member organization that is not officially designated as an SRO and performs a broad array
of SRO functions. It has a written agreement with the CVM to provide supplementary
regulatory support in the review of securities offerings. Through its agreement the CVM has
adequate oversight authority of the process. Anbima also has a comprehensive SRO program
for CIS operators that are Anbima members. Member CIS firms control more than 90% of all
CIS assets under management. While the Anbima program encompasses a series of binding
codes of conduct, a market oversight and on-site inspection program and a disciplinary
program, Anbima’s SRO functions for mutual funds are not subject to CVM oversight
because it is not an official SRO. Anbima is recognized by IOSCO as an SRO for
underwriting purposes with the endorsement of the CVM, and the CVM has a policy of
deferring enforcement action in matters when Anbima has taken action.
25. Principles for the Enforcement of Securities Regulation (P. 10-12). The CVM
market surveillance, on-site inspection and enforcement programs have grown substantially
since the 2002 FSAP. The CVM has successfully created a consent decree settlement process
(TC) that maximizes efficiency and enables the CVM to require violators to recompense
11
investor losses when appropriate. CVM has an extensive risk-based supervision program that
focuses on the largest entities with the largest number of investors/clients. This is consistent
with the highly concentrated nature of the Brazilian financial sector. Prudential supervision
of capital adequacy and risk issues for financial institutions (including banks and securities
brokerage firms) is the responsibility of BCB.
26. Principles for Cooperation in Regulation (P.13-15). CVM has signed cooperation
agreements with other Brazilian regulators. It is a signatory to the IOSCO multilateral
memorandum of understanding (MMOU) and has bilateral agreements with more than 25
international regulatory bodies. It has used these agreements to share information with other
regulators.
Principles for Issuers (P. 16-18). Brazil formally adopted IFRS accounting standards in
2009 and all companies in Brazil, publicly listed and private, are required to apply IFRS. In
2009 the CVM created a new company-based disclosure report, the Listed Company
Reference Form, supplementing its existing annual and periodic reports. The Reference Form
is an automated, structured form, designed to promote prompt corporate disclosure and
facilitate access by analysts and investors. The CVM also created an expedited limited
offering procedure. Through this procedure issuers may sell debt securities to a limited
number of institutional investors. CVM has also created an expedited filing program for its
largest and most liquid companies. The Corporation Law provides limited minority
shareholder protection in change of control events. For example the Law (§254-A) requires
in a change of control, that the purchaser must conduct a tender offer to acquire the
remaining voting shares for at least 80 percent of the amount paid for shares comprising the
controlling block. There are no “tag along” protection requirements for holders of non-voting
shares. The Law also requires a mandatory tender offer in a going private transaction (§4.4).
Minority shareholders representing 10 percent of the free float may call for a special
shareholder meeting to request a new price evaluation. In these situations only the non-
control shareholders are entitled to vote (§4A). A mandatory tender offer is also required if,
through open market purchases, the controlling shareholder reduces the company free float
below 33%. CVM Instruction 361 requires that tender offers must be provided to all
shareholders, with equal treatment for all shareholders in a class. In response to the limited
protections in the Corporation Law, the CVM and Bovespa undertook improved corporate
governance and minority shareholder protection rights through listing standards for a new
equity market. In 2001, BOVESPA created the Novo Mercado (NM) and two listing
segments with special, albeit lower, corporate governance standards (level 1 and level 2).
Level II companies must have a minimum of five Board members and 20% must be
independent. The Novo Mercado has the highest standards. Companies may not issue non-
voting shares and the company Board must have 20% independent directors. In the event of a
tender offer, there must be full tag along rights and an independent pricing valuation in the
event of delisting. An effort to improve these standards in 2010 was only partially successful.
12
27. Principles for Auditors, Credit Rating Agencies, and Other Information Service
Providers (P. 19-23). Brazil revised its audit standards in substantial conformance with
International Auditing Standards. A series of professional organizations, governed and
funded by the profession, with CVM oversight, is responsible for adoption of audit standards,
professional qualifications examination and licensing, and a peer review program for
monitoring compliance. The peer review process is mandated by CVM regulation. Audit
firms reviewed under the peer review program are permitted to select the firm that conducts
the review and the fee for the review is negotiated bilaterally. The CVM has broad
supervisory authority over this process. Brazil has adopted a mandatory five-year firm
rotation requirement for listed companies. One five-year extension is permitted for
companies that voluntarily agree to create an audit committee, with a majority of independent
members. In April 2012, the CVM adopted Instruction 521 creating a regulatory system for
registration and oversight of credit rating agencies.
28. Principles for Collective Investment Schemes and Hedge Funds (P. 24-28). In
2005 all regulatory responsibilities for CIS were consolidated and placed with the CVM. The
CVM has a comprehensive regulatory regime, including a risk-based on-site supervision
program, largely based on disclosure principles. Mutual funds in Brazil are created as
condominiums, a unique legal structure that doesn’t encompass principles of limited liability
for investors. Hedge funds are regulated as mutual funds and other CVM regulations cover
activities of private equity and venture capital funds. The fund by-laws and fund operator
control decisions on suspension of redemptions and the orderly winding-down of a fund.
CVM regulations do not require funds to provide investors with an annual report but instead
mandate frequent disclosure of portfolio holdings and investors may request a copy of the
annual financial statement of the fund.
29. Principles for Market Intermediaries (P. 29-32). BCB has primary licensing
authority and exclusive prudential regulatory authority over market intermediaries’ capital
adequacy, systemic risk and firm resolution. BCB applies the same capital adequacy
regulatory methods to banks and financial intermediaries (broker-dealers). The CVM has
responsibility for regulation of intermediary sales practices and issues related to investor
protection and investor suitability. CVM investor protection authority does not apply to the
purchase and sale of government securities. In 2011 CVM adopted new comprehensive
internal control and suitability regulations for market intermediaries (compliance required by
October 2012) that require, inter alia, mandatory recording of all client trade instructions.
The CVM licenses and regulates autonomous agents, market analysts and industry advisors
who provide general or specific investing advise but are not permitted to control or direct
investor funds. The CVM also regulates custodians who must also be BCB licensed financial
institutions.
30. Principles for the Secondary Market (P. 33-37). Securities exchanges and trading
systems must be registered with the CVM and the CVM has continuing regulatory authority
over Bovespa and CETIP rules, operations, trading, and new products. CVM has built a
13
market surveillance capability that complements the Bovespa and CETIP surveillance
program. The CVM has broad legal authority to bring enforcement actions for all forms of
market manipulation. OTC trading in debt instruments, including corporate debt (limited),
FIDCs and other-backed securities is conducted through CETIP, which provides post-trade
reporting. Pre-trade transparency is available through unofficial commercial sources.
31. Principle Relating to Clearing and Settlement (P. 38). Assessment deferred to the
ongoing CPSS-IOSCO ROSC.
14
Table 1B. Summary Implementation of the IOSCO Principles—Detailed Assessments
Principle Grade Findings
Principle 1. The responsibilities of the Regulator
should be clear and objectively stated.
F.I. Three entities are involved in the regulation
of the Brazilian securities market: the
Comissão de Valores Mobiliários (CVM),
the Central Bank (BCB) and the Conselho
Monetário Nacional (CMN). The CMN is
responsible for setting national policy. With
regard to capital markets regulation, the
BCB acts as a licensing body and prudential
regulator and the CVM acts as a licensing
body and business and market conduct
regulator. While there is some duplication
in the licensing of financial intermediaries
(broker-dealers), the BCB and CVM have
established workable coordination
arrangements
Principle 2. The Regulator should be operationally
independent and accountable in the exercise of its
functions and powers.
P.I. While the CVM has clear legal
independence, the BCB does not. However,
its history demonstrates that it is
operationally independent. Stability of
funding is a long-standing problem. While
both agencies have the authority to collect
fees from regulated entities this is not a
stable source of funding. The actual agency
budget must be reviewed by the Ministry of
Planning and Budget, approved by the
Congress and subject to mid-year, post-hoc,
reductions by the Minister of Finance.
15
Principle 3. The Regulator should have adequate
powers, proper resources and the capacity to perform
its functions and exercise its powers.
P.I. While CVM has received increases in
budget and personnel in recent years, it still
lacks sufficient resources, as well as control
over the allocation of its budget. The
Brazilian civil service process relies
exclusively on hiring via competitive
exams, which makes it difficult for the
CVM to hire persons with actual experience
in the capital markets or persons with
highly technical skills necessary for
effective regulation. There is an important
gap in regulatory authority for investor
protection and secondary market trading in
government securities.
Principle 4. The Regulator should adopt clear and
consistent regulatory processes.
F.I. The Securities Act provides for a public
notice process for CVM regulations (Article
8, §3, I of Law 6.385/76). All proposed and
final CVM regulations are published in the
Official Gazette of Brazil and are posted on
the CVM website. The rule or regulation
making process is led by the Market
Development Division, involving public
hearings and consultations with interested
divisions including CVM Legal Department
and Board Commissioners. The CVM legal
mandate includes investor protection and
development of Brazilian capital markets.
While it is not formally required to conduct
a cost-benefit analysis or consider the costs
of compliance when it adopts or amends its
rules, the CVM reports that it does consider
regulatory costs.
Principle 5. The staff of the Regulator should observe
the highest professional standards, including
appropriate standards of confidentiality.
F.I. Law 8112/93 requires a civil servant to
observe the law and the highest standards of
legality, impartiality, morality, efficiency,
and criminal liability in the performance of
official duties. In 2009 the BCB posted its
Code of Conduct on the BCB website.
Internally, the BCB has an Internal Affairs
unit to monitor compliance with the Code.
16
Principle 6. The Regulator should have or contribute
to a process to monitor, mitigate and manage
systemic risk, appropriate to its mandate.
F.I. The CVM has created an internal oversight
structure to monitor systemic risk in its
market and its regulated entities. It is also a
participant in an intergovernmental program
with other Brazilian financial regulatory
agencies.
Principle 7. The Regulator should have or contribute
to a process to review the perimeter of regulation
regularly.
F.I. The CVM Policy and Analysis Office and
the Risk Identification Committee are
specifically charged with ongoing
responsibility to examine emerging
regulatory issues that may be pertinent to
but outside the scope of CVM authority. On
a national level, COREMEC has similar
authority.
Principle 8. The Regulator should seek to ensure that
conflicts of interest and misalignment of incentives
are avoided, eliminated, disclosed or otherwise
managed.
F.I. The Brazilian financial markets are heavily
concentrated with a small number of
universal banks dominating all aspects of
the financial services sector. The CVM
approach to regulating conflicts of interest
is heavily reliant on disclosure of related
party or affiliate transactions to clients,
investors and the public. The potential for
conflicts of interest that could misalign
incentives is particularly significant for
Brazilian CIS that are owned by banks. In a
concentrated industry in which mutual
funds engage in a substantial volume of
daily trading with an affiliated bank, there
is an opportunity for substantial and
profitable improper activities.
17
Principle 9. Where the regulatory system makes use
of Self-Regulatory Organizations (SROs) that
exercise some direct oversight responsibility for their
respective areas of competence, such SROs should be
subject to the oversight of the Regulator and should
observe standards of fairness and confidentiality
when exercising powers and delegated
responsibilities.
P.I. The Brazilian system for regulation of
capital markets is notable for its creative
use of governmental regulators, licensed
self-regulatory organizations directly
overseen by the CVM (BM&F Bovespa and
CETIP), and voluntary unofficial
organizations that perform SRO functions
but are not subject to formal governmental
regulation and oversight. Several member-
based organizations perform one or more
functions that are self-regulatory. While the
CVM has a variety of working relationships
with these entities, it does not require SRO
registration, as they are not exchanges, even
though they may be viewed as SROs by the
industry, the public, and by international
organizations, and for some purposes by the
CVM. Also the CVM does not supervise
their activities, or exercise oversight of the
policies and programs they administer.
Principle 10. The Regulator should have
comprehensive inspection, investigation and
surveillance powers.
F.I. The Securities Act (Law 6.385/76) provides
the CVM with comprehensive inspection,
investigation and surveillance powers.
Principle 11. The Regulator should have
comprehensive enforcement powers.
F.I. The CVM may take administrative
enforcement action against any person for
violations of any provision of the Securities
Law, the Corporation Law, CVM
regulations, or any other provisions that are
under its responsibility. The CVM has
authority to impose administratively a
warning, a fine, a suspension from serving
as a director of market intermediaries and
public companies, temporary
disqualification up to 20 years, from
occupying managerial posts in market
intermediaries and public companies, and
suspension or cancellation of market
intermediaries licenses issued by CVM.
18
Principle 12. The regulatory system should ensure an
effective and credible use of inspection, investigation,
surveillance and enforcement powers and
implementation of an effective compliance program.
F.I. Since the 2002 FSAP the CVM has made
substantial progress in building credible
surveillance, inspection, investigation and
enforcement programs. In 2007 CVM
published Deliberation 521/07 creating a
risk-based supervision system (SBR) that
includes off-site and on-Site inspections.
The CVM has developed a negotiated
settlement process to successfully conclude
its investigation. Under CVM Deliberation
390, individuals or entities may agree to
settle a matter by agreeing to a consent
decree (termo de compromisso or TC).
Principle 13. The Regulator should have authority to
share both public and non-public information with
domestic and foreign counterparts.
F.I. The Securities Act (Law 6385/76, §28) (the
“Securities Act”) explicitly directs the
Central Bank of Brazil (BCB), the CVM,
the Pension Funds Agency (Previc), the
Federal Internal Revenue Authority and the
Superintendence of Private Insurance
(SUSEP) to have a system for the exchange
of information relating to the supervision in
their respective areas. The same article
explicitly provides that the Bank Secrecy
Act (Law 105/2001) may not be used to
prevent the exchange of information.
Principle 14. Regulators should establish information
sharing mechanisms that set out when and how they
will share both public and non-public information
with their domestic and foreign counterparts.
F.I. In 2010, the CVM and BCB signed an
MoU. The CVM also has written
agreements with Previc, the Federal Internal
Revenue Authority, SUSEP, the National
Treasury Authority, the Federal
Prosecutors’ Office, and other agencies.
The CVM has written agreements with
numerous foreign regulatory bodies. It is a
signatory to the IOSCO Multilateral
Memorandum of Understanding (MMOU).
Principle 15. The regulatory system should allow for
assistance to be provided to foreign Regulators who
need to make inquiries in the discharge of their
functions and exercise of their powers.
F.I. The CVM has legal authority to exchange
information with foreign authorities and it
has written bilateral agreements with, and
through the IOSCO MMOU, a wide array
of foreign regulators. It has used its
authority to exchange information with
other regulators.
19
Principle 16. There should be full, accurate and
timely disclosure of financial results, risk and other
information that is material to investors’ decisions.
F.I. CVM instruction 400 regulates the public
offer for the distribution of securities in
primary and secondary markets, setting
conditions applicable to public securities
offerings, the content and distribution of
prospectuses and other relevant offering
documents. In 2009, CVM Instruction 480
created a new company-based disclosure
system based on an electronic formatted
filing system for companies with securities
listed for trading on a regulated securities
market. This augments the traditional set of
disclosure requirements based on the
Corporation Law.
Principle 17. Holders of securities in a company
should be treated in a fair and equitable manner.
P.I. Fair treatment of minority shareholders
continues to be an important challenge.
Notwithstanding the initial success of N.M.
and Levels I and II, efforts to make further
improvements have been limited. The fair
treatment of minority shareholders, and
holders of non-voting classes of stock in
traditional listing companies and Level I
companies continues to be an issue.
Principle 18. Accounting standards used by issuers to
prepare financial statements should be of a high and
internationally acceptable quality.
F.I. In 2007 Law No. 11638/2007 amended the
Corporation Law and established a national
accounting standard setter which adopted
IFRS as the Brazilian accounting standard
Principle 19. Auditors should be subject to adequate
levels of oversight.
F.I. Auditors must be licensed and registered
with CVM and CFC/CRE. CVM conducts
periodic inspections and has enforcement
powers. CFC and CRE are controlled by the
Accounting Profession. There are no public
interest members on their Boards. The Peer
review process is not fully independent.
Principle 20. Auditors should be independent of the
issuing entity that they audit.
P.I. The CVM has adopted strong auditor
independence standards, including a five-
year audit firm rotation requirement. The
process for selection and appointment of
auditors does not include oversight by a
governance body independent in fact and
appearance from company management.
20
Principle 21. Audit standards should be of a high and
internationally acceptable quality.
F.I. IAS was adopted. CFC independence as a
standard setter should be examined.
Principle 22. Credit rating agencies should be subject
to adequate levels of oversight. The regulatory
system should ensure that credit rating agencies
whose ratings are used for regulatory purposes are
subject to registration and on going supervision.
B.I. In April 2012, the CVM adopted a
comprehensive regulation for registration
and oversight of credit rating agencies. It is
too soon to assess the implementation of the
regulation.
Principle 23. Other entities that offer investors
analytical or evaluative services should be subject to
oversight and regulation appropriate to the impact
their activities have on the market or the degree to
which the regulatory system relies on them.
F.I. The CVM has a formal licensing and
regulatory system for market analysts and
market consultants. Autonomous agents,
which are similar to introducing brokers in
the U.S. and may be individuals or entities,
also are licensed and regulated by CVM,
and BSM. None of these persons or entities
is permitted to have control over
investor/client funds and assets or exercise
discretionary investment authority.
Principle 24. The regulatory system should set
standards for the eligibility, governance, organization
and operational conduct of those who wish to market
or operate a collective investment scheme.
B.I. All investment funds must be registered
with the CVM. There is a fit and proper
requirement for the responsible director of
the CIS management firm and the firm must
demonstrate that it has adequate
infrastructure and technical resources. Each
CIS must maintain a minimum capital of
300,000 BR. Regulation of risk
management, prompt action in the event of
breaches or defaults, related party
transactions and reliance on annual
shareholder meetings to oversee governance
are areas that warrant further consideration.
Principle 25. The regulatory system should provide
for rules governing the legal form and structure of
collective investment schemes and the segregation
and protection of client assets.
P.I. The possible unlimited liability of fund
investors is a significant issue that may
require legislation to remedy. The winding
down process for a fund is controlled by the
fund operator and requires a meeting of
investors. Reliance on this process in a
period of market instability could create
risks for investors.
21
Principle 26. Regulation should require disclosure, as
set forth under the principles for issuers, which is
necessary to evaluate the suitability of a collective
investment scheme for a particular investor and the
value of the investor’s interest in the scheme.
B.I. The lack of an annual or periodic report to
investors is partially offset by monthly
disclosure of portfolio assets and public
access to an annual audited financial
statement on request. The lack of disclosure
of the fund’s methodology for calculating
NAV should be addressed.
Principle 27. Regulation should ensure that there is a
proper and disclosed basis for asset valuation and the
pricing and the redemption of units in a collective
investment scheme.
F.I. CVM instructions provide comprehensive
regulations governing the daily valuation of
fund portfolios according to CVM
accounting standards and subject to an
annual independent audit. Fund procedures
for redemption of investments, as well as
suspension, must be disclosed in the fund
prospectus and is subject to CVM oversight.
Principle 28. Regulation should ensure that hedge
funds and/or hedge funds managers/advisers are
subject to appropriate oversight.
F.I. Hedge funds are classified as multi market
mutual funds and are subject to the same
regulatory structure as other mutual funds.
Accordingly the CVM licenses fund
administrators, portfolio managers and the
fund itself. Hedge funds must adhere to the
same monthly portfolio disclosure, record-
keeping, internal control, conflict of interest
and asset valuation and daily pricing rules
as described above for mutual funds.
Also hedge funds are subject to the same
prohibition on borrowing that applies to all
mutual funds. Leverage is only possible
through the use of derivatives. The CVM
also has adopted a separate registration and
regulatory scheme for venture capital and
private equity funds. These are a growing
segment of the Brazilian institutional
investment sector.
Principle 29. Regulation should provide for minimum
entry standards for market intermediaries.
F.I. In Brazil the responsibility for licensing
financial intermediaries is shared by BCB
and the CVM. Because broker-dealers are
included in the BCB definition of financial
institution, BCB has primary licensing
responsibility, as well as capital and
prudential regulation
22
Principle 30. There should be initial and on going
capital and other prudential requirements for market
intermediaries that reflect the risks that the
intermediaries undertake.
F.I. BCB is the exclusive prudential regulator
for capital adequacy. It applies the same
standards to banks and non-bank financial
intermediaries even though the businesses
are substantially different. Reporting
requirements for small entities could be
improved.
Principle 31. Market intermediaries should be
required to establish an internal function that delivers
compliance with standards for internal organization
and operational conduct, with the aim of protecting
the interests of clients and their assets and ensuring
proper management of risk, through which
management of the intermediary accepts primary
responsibility for these matters.
F.I.
Existing internal control requirements were
strengthened by CVM instruction 505.
Firms must be in compliance by October
2012.
Principle 32. There should be procedures for dealing
with the failure of a market intermediary in order to
minimize damage and loss to investors and to contain
systemic risk.
B.I. BCB has exclusive responsibility for
dealing with the failure of a market
intermediary. It has a comprehensive
monitoring process, with access to
information on virtually every financial
instrument and transaction. The BCB has
broad authority to take prompt corrective
action, directly or indirectly through the
appointment of a receiver. When BCB takes
action because a market intermediary is
failing, its deposit guarantee fund does not
apply. The Bovespa investor protection
fund is limited in the benefits it can provide,
a maximum of 70,000 BR per transaction.
Also the fund does not cover losses
involving government securities, a major
component of investment accounts.
Principle 33. The establishment of trading systems
including securities exchanges should be subject to
regulatory authorization and oversight.
B.I. The CVM issues licenses and regulates
exchanges and securities trading systems.
CVM instruction 461 establishes
procedures and policies for licensing and
regulating exchanges, including types of
activities, services and products.
23
Principle 34.There should be on going regulatory
supervision of exchanges and trading systems that
should aim to ensure that the integrity of trading is
maintained through fair and equitable rules that strike
an appropriate balance between the demands of
different market participants.
F.I. CVM has the authority to review and
approve all Bovespa and CETIP rules,
procedures and new products or services.
Both organizations are required to maintain
internal regulatory oversight programs.
Principle 35. Regulation should promote transparency
of trading.
F.I. Transparency on Bovespa is strong. Pre-
trade order exposure on CETIP may
warrant attention if the volume of OTC
trading in FIDCs and other instruments
grows.
Principle 36. Regulation should be designed to detect
and deter manipulation and other unfair trading
practices.
F.I. There is a well-developed surveillance,
investigation and enforcement program to
address market misconduct.
Principle 37. Regulation should aim to ensure the
proper management of large exposures, default risk
and market disruption.
F.I. A variety of factors identified in the
description of this principle make it
unlikely that a large exposure default would
be a catalyst for market disruptions. The
CCP appears to be sufficiently liquid to
resolve any problems.
Principle 38. Securities settlement systems and
central counterparties should be subject to regulatory
and supervisory requirements that are designed to
ensure that they are fair, effective and efficient and
that they reduce systemic risk.
Not rated
CPSS-IOSCO ROSC
Fully Implemented (FI), Broadly Implemented (BI), Partly Implemented (PI), Not Implemented (NI), Not
Applicable (NA)
24
Recommended action plan and authorities’ response
Recommended action plan
Table 2. Recommended Action Plan to Improve Implementation of the IOSCO Principles
Principle Recommended Action
Principle 2 It is recommended that the standard for employee liability
should be clarified and conformed. CVM and BCB
employees should be subject to liability only for willful
actions not taken in good faith.
Principle 3 The CVM should seek the authority to recruit and hire, at
competitive salaries, a limited number of employees with
specialized skill sets and financial sector experience. The
CVM’s investor protection mandate should apply to the
purchase and sale of government securities by retail
investors.
Principle 5 The CVM should consider adopting a formal recusal policy
for its staff that applies to participation in any material way
rather than merely final responsibility for the decision. In
conjunction with adoption of such a policy, the CVM
should consider providing written guidance.
Principle 9 The CVM should oversee private self-regulatory
organizations that perform oversight, policy, examination,
disciplinary and qualification/licensing functions that are
integral to the national regulatory structure.
Principle 11 The maximum compensation from the Bovespa MCR fund
may be too small and too narrow to adequately protect
investor accounts. The CVM should examine the issue.
Principle 16 The electronic reference form is an interesting innovation
that may benefit from continuing refinement. CVM
Instruction 476 and the well-known issuer concept are also
sound but fine-tuning may enhance their use. The
Corporation law should be amended, eliminating the
outmoded newspaper publication requirement for
company annual reports
Principle 17 and 20 The Corporation Law should be amended to strengthen
minority shareholder protections for traditionally listed
companies. Adoption of the full package of 2011 N.M.
and Level I and II listing standards should be a priority.
25
Principle Recommended Action
Principles 18 and 19 Audit standard and licensing boards should have greater
independence from the profession. The Governing Boards
should have independent representation from the public.
Principle 19 Audit firms should not be permitted to select the firm that
will conduct its peer review and to negotiate bilaterally the
amount of the fee.
Principle 25 The legal structure of mutual funds should be revised to
provide investors with liability limited to the amount of
their investment.
Principle 26 Mutual funds should be required to provide investors an
annual report. They should also be required to disclose
their methodology for NAV calculation.
Principle 27 CVM should adopt a policy and contingency plan enabling
it to intervene to suspend temporarily the redemption of
mutual fund shares and to supervise the orderly winding
down of a mutual fund when this is required to protect the
interests of investors or the stability of financial markets Principle 30 The BCB should consider whether its VaR model,
designed for banks, is optimal for non-bank financial
intermediaries and whether its quarterly reporting
requirement for smaller non-banks is sufficiently timely.
Principle 31 The CVM should have authority to protect investors from
fraudulent sales practices by market intermediaries
involving government securities.
Principle 34 Bovespa should reexamine whether there is a need to
modify the intraday auction process for block orders,
particularly when applied across multiple days
Authorities’ response to the assessment
32. Comissão de Valores Mobiliários (CVM) - the Brazilian Securities Commission
welcomes the Assesment of the Securities Regulation Report on Observance and Codes
(ROSC SR)under the 2012 Financial Sector Assessment Program. The Assessment, on most
of the 37 covered IOSCO Principles, provides an accurate portrait of the Brazilian
Regulatory environment.
33. However, despite CVM proving several additional background materials during the
ROSC SR process, some negative bias and misleading analysis exist in some parts of the
Report. The most serious one is that in our view the Assessment is not fully compliant with
the IOSCO´s Methodology for Assessing Implementation of the IOSCO Objectives and
Principles of Securities Regulation, issued on 2011 with the purpose of turning ROSC´s
26
evaluations homogenous. This appeared when addressing – and more important - giving
benchmark results on Principles 9, 17, 25, and 33. In addition to this major problem, the
description of the Brazilian regulatory environment was sometimes incomplete. We will
address these issue principle by principle, as follows:
34. On Principle 9, the Methodology is very clear that the usage of SRO´s is a
discretionary policy option, and therefore, it is not mandatory, as the assessment suggests,
that CVM considers any voluntary SRO (actually a plus on the system prescribed by IOSCO
Principles) as an official SRO. The existing official SRO´s do fully comply with the
principle, and under our view, the Principle is Fully Implemented. In summary, CVM
strongly disagrees with the partially implemented rating for Principle 9.
i. According to the report, the Brazilian regulatory system falls short of the desired
standards due to a “lack of governmental oversight of the Anbima, Apimec and
Ancord programs”. We argue that such finding not only suggests a misreading of the
Brazilian regulatory system, but also fails to abide by the IOSCO Methodology. In
full compliance with the principle, any SRO given a role by the legislation is fully
accountable to the CVM.
ii. With regard to the Methodology, it is paramount to recognize that Principle 9
explicitly preconditions its application to situations where “the regulatory system
makes use of Self-Regulatory Organizations (SROs) that exercise some direct
oversight responsibility for their respective areas of competence” (IOSCO
Methodology). This means that it is only in situations where SROs are recognized by
the Regulator that the assessment becomes possible. Therefore, it is not reasonable to
hold against CVM an evaluation based on some organizations being “viewed” by the
market and/or the public as SROs when these entities do not actually have such role
formally recognized. It is particularly important to stress that no regulated activities
require a mandatory membership of this so called “informal SROs”.
iii. ANBIMA, APIMEC and ANCORD certification and licensing roles follow rules
directly prescribed in the regulation and are fully accountable to the CVM in each and
every situation where they are entrusted in this role. The assessment singles out
ANBIMA program. By the rationale that can be apprehended from the Assessment,
ANBIMA voluntary self-regulation is a factor that if absent would get our regulation
closer to a fully implemented rating for principle 9. This rationale seems to be at odds
with the IOSCO Methodology that, as previously stated, recognizes the use of SRO´s
as a discretionary policy option. Additionally, it must be considered that CVM
exercises direct oversight over every single ANBIMA member accredited as a market
participant, and that the Commission has the legal power and does not refrain at all
from taking action against these members whenever needed. Therefore, the self-
regulation that the industry participants voluntarily impose on themselves by adhering
to ANBIMA codes of conduct can only increase the market quality and should not be
considered a negative aspect.
27
35. On Principle 17, the CVM believes that there is plenty of room for the evolution of
Corporate Governance in Brazil. However, the Assessment seems to address some issues in
an inaccurate manner or without the appropriate Methodology backup. Initially, the
existence per se of preferred shares, should not affect the evaluation result, or at least, should
affect equally every ROSC in countries that permit the existence of this type of share.
i. In addition, IOSCO Principles and Methodology do not require the existence of a
specific Audit Committee. Nevertheless the CVM does encourage the adoption of
voluntary Audit Committees, and where those do not exist, other independent boards
(the Fiscal Board or the Management Board, depending on the specific case) have the
power to hire the auditor, which is never hired directly by the managers.
ii. It is also important to clarify that there are differences with regard to the
communication of position changes on stockholding for the shareholders and the
manger: For shareholders having direct or indirect participation of 5%, disclosure is
governed by Instruction 358, art. 12, which requires immediate disclosure to the
company. For managers, a more broad disclosure is required by CVM Instruction
358, art. 11.
36. On Principle 25, CVM disagrees with the partially implement rating, and
strongly believes a fully implemented is the correct one. While improvements surely are
possible and the comments made in the assessment will be taken into consideration, it is our
view that the arguments made to justify the benchmark rating were based largely on a
subjective point of view rather than on objective reasoning based on the necessary
usage of IOSCO Methodology. The report bases its assessment on arguable negative
aspects that are out of the Methodology´s scope, without considering the balance of
characteristics of our regulation, and apparently not taking into account key and unique
features of the Brazilian system, and the fact that the Brazilian CIS Industry holds one trillion
dollars in assets, and that no systemic problems were observed in recent years.
i. The principle deals with the quality of the CIS regulation, especially regarding
investor´s protection, while the assessment was based on a dissatisfaction related to
the existence of procedures for orderly winding up of CIS business.
ii. Undoubtedly, the legislation in place in Brazil prescribes several measures to ensure
that the winding up of a CIS to be orderly. For instance, clear rules apply to the
valuation of assets and to the equitable treatment of quota-holders. To ensure that
winding up is orderly, CVM´s Instruction 409 prescribes specific steps to be observed
on the liquidation of a fund, including the requirement of an independent auditor
statement on the funds’ assets and transactions (art. 106). The fund operator must
inform the CVM of the winding up of the fund and file all relevant documentation
(art. 107). These regulations have been in place since 2004 and passed well through
the probation imposed by the 2008 crisis. Throughout this period we found no
example of a “disorderly” winding up of any fund.
28
iii. Additionally, in cases that winding up occurs in a context of suspension of
redemption, our rules are fully compliant with IOSCO Principles, including the
specific published paper on the topic (Principles on Suspensions of Redemptions in
Collective Investment Schemes, Report of the Technical Committee of IOSCO –
January, 19, 2012).
iv. On the matter of the unlimited liability constitution of Brazilian CIS, three aspects
must be taken into account: first and foremost, IOSCO Principles and Methodology
do not prescribe any issue on this matter; second, this aspect was positively
considered by FSAP´s Systemic Risk Team, and; third and more practical - CIS in
Brazil are not allowed to borrow and derivatives have to be traded in clearing houses
or trade repositories (and are therefore subject to margin calls), which in practice
severely limit leverage possibilities. On recent years, we did not observe any CIS
bankruptcy due to excessive leverage, which is daily monitored by CVM.
37. On Principle 33, we understand that our assessment was affected by two items, the
supervision of Automated Trading Systems and the limitation of the Dispute Settlement
Mechanism. On our self-assessment, we believe that both issues are comprehensively
covered in our jurisdiction, and the correct benchmark rating should be “Fully
implemented”.
i. According to CVM´s Instruction 461, the exchange’s trading system shall promote,
on an ongoing basis, regular, adequate and efficient price formation, prompt trade
execution, visibility and registration and public dissemination of data, in a fast, broad
and detailed way, so to ensure adequate information disclosure and price formation.
The same Instruction states that the exchange’s trading rules shall avoid or curb
unfair practices, fraud and manipulation, ensuring that all persons authorized to trade
in the environment receive equal treatment. It also sets the rules governing the
processing of orders and trades (art. 73, sole paragraph: “In the case of a centralized
and multilateral trading system, price formation shall be achieved through
interacting orders, in order of precedence according to the best price, with due
regard for the chronological sequence of the orders entered into the system or
trading environment, except in the cases of special trading procedures outlined in the
exchanges’ regulation”).
ii. This issue is addressed by CVM in many different ways: (i) whenever applying for
authorization, the exchange must submit its internal rules for approval, and these rules
must be fully compliant with CVM Instruction 461, (ii) during the application
process, the applicant exchange must submit a report prepared by an independent
auditor describing the “trading, registering and back-up systems” (Instruction 461,
annex II, I, “a”), and (iii) once a year, a report is due on the risk management systems
that shall be approved by the Board of Directors of the exchange, in consultation with
the audit committee, and shall be sent to CVM within five (5) business days of the
approval thereof. This report must address, among other things, information system’s
regular operation and security. In addition to these reviews, CVM and BSM (the
29
regulatory body of the exchange) monitor the trading on an ongoing basis, in order to
assure the observation of the above mentioned regulatory provisions.
iii. Concerning the dispute resolution mechanism, we have to consider that the limitation
of MRP fund (R$ 70,000) is not applicable by investor, but by event. So in a case of
more than one event with the same investor, an amount of more than R$ 70.000,00
may be paid. In addition, we have to consider that the average transaction in the
Brazilian exchange is only R$ 9.392,15 (Jan-May 2012 average), so at least on what
concerns problems with trade execution, the applicable limit is far beyond the average
value of trades.
II. DETAILED ASSESSMENT
Table 3. Detailed Assessment of Implementation of the IOSCO Principles
Principles Relating to the Regulator
Principle 1. The responsibilities of the regulator should be clear and objectively stated.
Description There are three regulators of the Brazilian securities market: the Comissão de
Valores Mobiliários (CVM), the Central Bank and the Conselho Monetário
Nacional (CMN).
The responsibilities of the CVM are contained in two laws. Law 6.385/76
(“Securities Law”) established the CVM and Law 6.404/76 (“Corporation Law”)
governs the structure, organization and responsibilities of corporations. The CVM
is subject to Brazil’s Constitution and other laws passed by Congress. The
President of Brazil may also issue provisional acts, which are temporary for 30
days, with one 30-day extension, unless ratified by the Congress.
The CMN is a policy committee, composed of the Minister of Finance (“MoF”),
the Governor of the Central Bank of Brazil (“Bacen” or “BCB”) and the Minister
of Planning Budget and Management. The CMN on occasion will issue general
policy guidelines that apply to the entire financial services sector in Brazil. The
CVM must adhere to them and its regulations and interpretations must not conflict
with CMN policy. The CMN does not have supervisory powers.
The CVM itself has the power to issue regulations and interpretive guidance
consistent with Laws 6.385 and 6.404. CVM Instructions are regulations of
general applicability in specific areas of responsibility, such as securities offerings
or collective investment schemes. The CVM typically proposes a draft Instruction
and invites public comment. Final Instructions are available on the CVM website
(English translations are provided on the website for selected Instructions that may
be of interest to foreigners). The CVM also issues Deliberations. These are
binding statements of the CVM’s understanding of the law. They are issued
without a public exposure or comment period. For example, the CVM has issued a
Deliberation when it adopted a new procedure for administrative enforcement
proceedings. Whenever the CVM suspends trading in a security on Bovespa, it
does so through a Deliberation. Occasionally the CVM will issue a Legal Opinion
30
to clarify a provision of the law. However legal opinions are not used to provide
interpretations of CVM Instructions. The CVM prefers to do this through an
amendment to the Instruction. Finally the CVM Department Directors are
authorized to publish Circulars that provide guidance on filing information with
the CVM or other internal procedures. In limited circumstances the CVM may
provide informal guidance on a confidential basis. Any person who objects to a
staff Circular may request review by the CVM Board. All administrative
proceedings decisions of the Board of the CVM may be appealed to the National
Financial System Appeal Council (“CRSFN”). The CRSFN operates under the
general authority of the Minister of Finance. The CRSFN is an 8-member group
composed of representatives of the CVM, the BCB, SUSEP (the insurance
regulator) and the MoF and four members representing the four key industry trade
associations (UQBAR, Anbima, Bovespa and IBRACON).
The responsibilities of BCB are contained in Law Nº 4595. It is subject to the
Brazilian Constitution and regulations approved by the CMN. The Central Bank is
responsible for granting licenses to all financial institutions in Brazil. This
includes market intermediaries (broker-dealers). The BCB has authority for
prudential regulation and supervision of financial institutions. This includes
responsibility for regulation of capital adequacy standards, resolution of failing
financial institutions and securities clearance, settlement, depository and payment
systems. All BCB-registered financial institutions that operate as financial
intermediaries or C.I.S. must also obtain a license form the CVM. The CVM is
responsible for the regulation and supervision of these entities in areas other than
capital adequacy, such as investor protection and sales practices, disclosure,
internal controls and operations, and trading practices. The CVM also has broad
onsite inspection and enforcement authority for matters covered in the Securities
Act and the Corporation Law. The CVM is also the primary regulator of the
secondary markets for equity, non-governmental debt and derivatives (e.g.
BOVESPA).
The BCB has primary responsibility for supervision of the payment system and
related clearing operations that can be systemically important such as the
operations of clearinghouses and securities depositories.
The CVM and BCB have established procedures to avoid regulatory duplication.
As discussed in principles 13-15, there are written agreements on cooperation
among the CVM, BCB, SUSEP and Previc (pension regulator) and coordinating
committees have been created by these entities (see principle 6 discussion).
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments The regulatory structure of Brazil has some characteristics of a “twin peaks”
regulatory model. The differentiation of responsibility between the CVM and BCB
is understood by both agencies. The one important anomaly is the responsibility of
the BCB for regulation of the government debt market. This includes
responsibility for sales practices, business conduct and investor protection that
would otherwise be the responsibility of the CVM. This issue is discussed in the
principles on regulation of market intermediaries.
31
Principle 2. The regulator should be operationally independent and accountable in the exercise
of its functions and powers.
Description The CVM is made up of a Chairman and four Directors nominated by the
President of Brazil and approved by the Senate. All must have a good reputation
and proven experience in the securities market. Board members are appointed for
five-year terms, with one term ending each year. Board members may be removed
if they are criminally convicted or if they are found to have failed to perform their
duties. Such a finding must be made in an administrative hearing under the
supervision of the Minister of the Economy with the final decision made by the
President of Brazil (§6 of Law 6385). Article 5 of Law Nº 6385 provides that the
CVM is independent and legally autonomous. The BCB is similarly structured. Its
Board is appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. However, unlike
the CVM, BCB Board members do not serve for fixed terms. Its resolutions
(regulations) must be issued by the CMN, on which the Governor of the BCB sits.
While the CVM is under the general authority of the MoF, its actions are not
subject to its review. The CVM has published a set of procedures that governs its
disciplinary process (Deliberation 538). All CVM final actions, including
Enforcement decisions and negotiated Enforcement settlements, are published in a
written statement that is available on its website. Parties adversely affected by
CVM action, regulatory or enforcement, may appeal to the CSFRN. The CVM is
also subject to Congressional oversight. The Brazilian Court of Audit (“TCU”)
audits the CVM financial statements and accounts, and the Office of the
Comptroller General (“CGU”) reviews the operations of the CVM and its success
in meeting program goals contained in a government-wide performance plan. The
CGU also oversees the activities of the CVM Internal Auditor. The CVM and
BCB publish annual reports, highlighting their activities and containing audited
financial statements.
The CVM legal department reports that members of the CVM Board and its staff
are legally protected from personal legal action for the bona fide performance of
their duties by §22 of Law 9028/95. This protection extends to former employees
as well. In the event of a lawsuit, the CVM Legal Department has the authority to
represent CVM Board members and staff pursuant to Provisional Measure 2216-
37/01.
The Governor of the BCB has the rank of Cabinet Minister, which carries legal
protection from private legal action arising from the performance of official
duties. The BCB reports that its staff and persons appointed by the BCB to act as
intervener, liquidator or who sit on the Director’s Council are currently protected
from civil liability for actions in the performance of their duties. This protection
does not apply to willful or negligent misconduct. The BCB and its employees,
including the Governor have in the past faced numerous private actions in relation
to their exercise of regulatory powers as well provision of financial assistance.
The CVM lacks full control over its budget. Law 7940/89 sets the amount of all
fees paid by the financial services industry for regulatory services. The money
collected is paid directly to the Brazilian Treasury. The amount of fees collected
32
provides a nominal target for the CVM budget that is never reached. The CVM
must submit its proposed budget to the Minister of Planning who has full authority
to reduce the amount requested. It is then submitted as part of the overall
governmental budget to Congress for approval. Congress may also increase or
reduce the CVM budget. After Congressional approval, the CVM receives its
funding in quarterly installments. Each year in February, the Minister of Finance
may further reduce the budget of all government agencies based upon the level of
revenue collected by the government. As a result the non-fixed portion of the
CVM budget is usually cut at this point.
Article16 of Law Nº 4595 provides for the assessment of fees to pay expenses of
the BCB. However its budget is also subject to executive branch and
Congressional review and approval.
Assessment Partly Implemented
Comments While the CVM has clear legal independence, the BCB does not. However, its
history demonstrates that it is operationally independent of political influence.
While both agencies have the authority to collect fees from regulated entities this
is not a stable source of funding, as the actual agency budget must be reviewed by
the Ministry of Planning and Budget, approved by the Congress and subject to
mid-year reductions by the Minister of Finance.
There appears to be an inconsistency between the CVM and BCB on the liability
of its employees. The CVM believes that its staff are immune for official actions
taken in “good faith”, while the BCB believes that its employees may be liable for
negligent acts. It is recommended that the standard for employee liability should
be clarified. CVM and BCB employees should be subject to liability only for
willful actions not taken in good faith.
Principle 3. The regulator should have adequate powers, proper resources and the capacity to
perform its functions and exercise its powers.
Description The BCB and the CVM share regulatory authority over financial intermediaries.
Both the BCB and the CVM have licensing authority over intermediaries. The
CVM is responsible for business conduct and market regulation of intermediaries
and the other secondary markets, equity, derivatives and non-governmental debt.
The CVM lacks regulatory authority to protect investors from fraudulent sales
practices by market intermediaries involving government securities.
Law Nº 6385/76 provides the CVM with broad authority. This includes substantial
powers of surveillance of markets, issuers, and market intermediaries (§8). The
CVM may also obtain information on markets, institutions, financial products,
customers and parties involved in securities transactions (§9), carry out
investigations (§9), impose sanctions for violations of the law (§11), suspend
trading of securities on the stock exchanges (§9), and prohibit improper market
conduct (§9). The CVM also has the power to share information with domestic
and foreign regulatory authorities mentioned above (§28).
In Brazil, capital market intermediaries are considered financial institutions, the
term that is applied to banks. The BCB is responsible for prudential surveillance,
33
principally capital adequacy, and oversight of the currency and government debt
markets. Its laws and regulations apply equally to financial institutions, which
encompasses banks and capital market intermediaries. The Banking Law (Law
4595/1964) grants the BCB full authority to license banks and take remedial
actions, including resolution of non-viable banks. The Banking Law, Law 6024
and Resolution 4019 establish the authority of the BCB to undertake enforcement
action, apply penalties and intervene and resolve weak banks independently. Law
6024 grants the BCB the power to intervene and extra-judicially liquidate financial
institutions. Capital rules are covered in Resolutions 3444, and 3490 plus other
attendant resolutions.
Complementary Law No. 105 permits the BCB and the CVM to share
information, even if this relates to data protected by bank secrecy. Because the
legal departments of CVM and BCB had different interpretations of
Complementary Law No. 105, this provision was incorporated into a 2010
Memorandum of Understanding between the BCB and CVM. Notwithstanding
this MOU, the CVM has continued to request and obtain a court order whenever it
has sought information subject to the Bank Secrecy Act. The use of a judicial
process has been the preferred approach of the BCB.
As described in principle 2, the CVM does not have complete control over its
budget and the overall amount is frequently less than the amount of fees collected.
The CVM also is limited in its authority to reallocate budgeted funds. All accounts
are designated as fixed cost or investment and the CVM may not reallocate money
from one account to another. Also, because personnel costs are paid separately by
another government agency, the CVM cannot reallocate money into or out of its
personnel account.
While the CVM budget is less than the amount of industry fees and less than what
they believe is necessary, it has grown since the 2002 FSAP. In 2003, the CVM
was authorized to pay staff that are hired under the national competitive
examination process according to a special salary scale that is substantially higher
than most other government agencies. While salaries may be less than comparable
private sector salaries, they are sufficiently attractive to retain staff and the CVM
staff turnover rate is very low. Competition for new positions is quite high. In
2011 the CVM was authorized to increase its staff by approximately 20%. Due to
budget limitations, the additional staff had to wait until 2012 to begin work.
The CVM’s staff recruitment process is very complex. The CVM must recruit and
select technical staff, other than attorneys, accountants or librarians, through a
written competitive examination process. While the CVM may select subjects on
the exam, it is administered by an independent institution. Any person with a
university degree may take the exam and the CVM is required to offer jobs to the
persons who have the highest scores. No interview process is permitted and the
CVM has no discretion to select from among the highest qualifiers. There is no
ability to give preference to persons with work experience in the financial services
sector or special qualifications, such as quantitative analytic skills or expertise in
financial analysis. As a result of this process, the CVM has a professional staff
with highly diverse academic credentials, including persons with medical and
34
engineering degrees. For this reason the CVM often has to provide extensive
training to new recruits.
The CVM does not control the number of attorneys it may hire, their salary or
their selection or retention. All government attorneys in Brazil are hired and report
to the Office of the Federal Attorney. The CVM requests an allocation of attorneys
from this office, and that office determines the number of attorneys to assign and
selects which attorneys will work for the CVM.
The CVM maintains an adequate IT infrastructure to monitor and oversee the
securities market. It has a department dedicated to its investor education program.
Assessment Partly Implemented
Comments While CVM has received increases in budget and personnel in recent years, it still
lacks sufficient resources, as well as control over the allocation of its budget. The
Brazilian civil service process relies exclusively on hiring via competitive exams,
which makes it difficult for the CVM to hire persons with actual experience in the
capital markets or persons with highly technical skills necessary for effective
regulation. The CVM should seek the authority to recruit and hire a limited
number of employees with specialized skill sets and financial sector experience.
Principle 4. The regulator should adopt clear and consistent regulatory processes.
Description The Securities Act provides for a public notice process for CVM regulations
(Article 8, §3, I of Law 6.385/76). All proposed and final CVM regulations are
published in the Official Gazette of Brazil and are posted on the CVM website.
While comment letters submitted to the CVM are not posted on its website, they
can be obtained by the public upon request. The CVM typically includes
explanatory notes in its final announcement of new or amended instructions
(rules).
The rule- or regulation-making process is led by the Market Development
Division of the CVM which prepares a draft with input from other departments
that have direct bearing on the matter under consideration. Subsequently the CVM
Board provides formal approval for a public hearing of the draft; it usually lasts
for a month. A formal report—“Relatório de Audiência Publica” —is prepared
with the public’s comments and CVM’s response. The final rule or regulation and
said report are submitted for discussion and final approval by the Board. Board
Commissioners and interested departments, including the Legal Department
provide comments and suggestions, particularly on the precise formulation of the
articles of the rule or regulation. After formal approval, the rule or regulation is
enacted and published along with the “Relatório” and a press release.
The CVM legal mandate includes investor protection and development of
Brazilian capital markets. However, it is not formally required to conduct a cost-
benefit analysis or consider the costs of compliance when it adopts or amends its
rules. While consideration of costs is not a mandatory requirement, the CVM
reports that during the rule-making process it considers the costs of implementing
a new regulation, with due consideration of comments submitted by stakeholders.
35
CVM Deliberation 538 governs the administrative processes for its disciplinary
actions. The CVM has published Instructions (rules) on its registration/licensing
procedures for issuers (CVM 400) and corporations (CVM 480), for securities
exchanges and trading systems (CVM 461), for market intermediaries (CVM 387
and 505, compliance by October 2012) and for C.I.S. (CVM 409).
Any decision on licensing/registration that is made by CVM staff may be appealed
to the CVM Board. As discussed previously, all CVM Board actions, regulatory or
disciplinary, may be appealed to the CRSFN. They may also be challenged in a
judicial proceeding, although this is extremely rare and has not occurred in recent
memory. In private judicial proceedings, a court may request the CVM to submit
an amicus curiae brief describing how the CVM interprets the relevant law.
The CVM is required to publish an annual report of its activities. This report
includes a brief notice of the regulatory processes undertaken during the year and
is made public on its website. The CVM website contains English translations of
many of its significant Instructions.
When the CVM conducts an investigation to determine whether there has been a
violation of the law or a CVM instruction, it is considered confidential. If the
CVM authorizes an administrative disciplinary proceeding, the defendants will be
permitted to review the CVM staff investigation file. If the CVM takes action and
imposes a sanction, either through adjudication or by a negotiated settlement, it
will issue a public statement that identifies the person or entity, the violation and
the sanction.
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments The CVM makes effective use of its internet website to provide investors and the
regulated industry with information.
Principle 5. The staff of the regulator should observe the highest professional standards,
including appropriate standards of confidentiality.
Description Brazil has a civil servant law (8112/93) that contains a code of conduct applicable
to all Brazilian government staff. The code includes provisions on the appropriate
use of information obtained by a government agency/employee, including the
observance of confidentiality and secrecy provisions and the protection of
personal data. Law Nº 8112/93 also requires a civil servant to observe the law and
the highest standards of legality, impartiality, morality, efficiency, and criminal
liability in the performance of official duties.
The CVM also has an Internal Auditor to investigate complaints of improper staff
conduct. The Civil Servant law requires an investigation whenever there is
information reported of a possible conduct violation (§143 of Civil Servant Law).
The Civil Servant Law also requires the CVM to have an Ethics Committee to
monitor staff compliance with the code. The members of the CVM Ethics
Committee are CVM employees who receive training from the National Ethics
Commission. They may recommend disciplinary actions for minor misconduct.
36
Serious violations may be referred to the Federal Attorney’s Office for criminal
prosecution. Under the Brazilian criminal code (§325) the action of “revealing or
facilitating the disclosure of any fact that a civil servant comes to know by reason
of his/her position and which should have been kept confidential” is a criminal act.
In 2009 the BCB posted its Code of Conduct on the BCB website. Internally, the
BCB has an Internal Affairs unit to monitor compliance with the Code.
CVM staff are permitted to purchase and own securities, but there are restrictions
that must be observed. Secrecy provisions are found in the Securities Act and
Complementary Act 105. According to these laws, no member of staff is allowed
to disclose or use information filed with or obtained by the CVM for personal
benefit.
New CVM employees must fill out a form identifying all securities they hold and
the amount. Furthermore, employees must report all trades to the internal auditor
within five days. The reporting requirement applies to CVM employee as well as a
spouse or dependent if a joint tax return is filed. Access to derivative markets is
limited to hedging purposes only, and new purchases may not be traded within
less than six months, unless prior permission is obtained from the Internal Auditor
(CVM Decree 351/94).
Members of the CVM Board are required to recuse (refrain from participation)
themselves from any decision in which they have a personal conflict of interest.
There is no written definition or explanation of conflicts of interest and the Board
member has personal responsibility to make the decision. Board members may
consult with the CVM Ethics Committee. If a CVM Board member declines to
participate in a decision they will state for the record that they are not
participating. CVM Board minutes are public information. There is not a formal
recusal policy or process for CVM staff. Informally, it is assumed that the CVM
staff will adhere to the same policy in the event that a staff member makes the
decision. This policy apparently would not apply to staff that participate in a
consultative role.
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments The CVM should consider adopting a formal recusal policy for its staff that
applies to participation in any material way rather than merely final responsibility
for the decision. In conjunction with adoption of such a policy, the CVM should
consider providing written guidance.
The CVM should also consider strengthening its employee securities holding
reporting process. For example they could require the staff to file an annual report
of all holdings; or periodically review a sample of staff portfolios to confirm
compliance. The current mandatory reporting should apply to all spouses/partners
and dependent children of CVM staff, even if they file separate tax reports.
Principle 6. The Regulator should have or contribute to a process to monitor, mitigate and
manage systemic risk, appropriate to its mandate.
Description The CVM has created an internal oversight structure to monitor systemic risk in its
37
market and its regulated entities. It is also a participant in an intergovernmental
program with other Brazilian financial regulatory agencies.
In 2011 the CVM created an Analysis and Research Office and made it
responsible for developing and improving the various CVM departments’ risk
management tools and methodologies. The Office is also responsible for
overseeing the various risk-based supervision matrices that the regulatory
departments prepare. In 2011 the CVM also issued Internal Rule 12 creating a
Risk Identification Committee (CIR). The CIR is composed of the members of the
CVM Board, all Heads of Departments, the Head of the Legal Department and the
Head of the Research and Analysis Office. The focus of the CIR is on new
products, activities and services that may represent potential systemic risk, as well
as on the options mitigating any risks. It is also responsible for assessing whether
the CVM’s powers, operational structure and regulatory framework are sufficient
to address the risks identified. During the first year the CIR focused on the
sufficiency of the CVM risk-based supervision matrix used to guide its internal
and on-site review programs.
CMN Decree 5685/06 created the Committee on Regulation and Supervision of
the Banking, Securities, Insurance and Pension Funds (COREMEC). COREMEC
is in the Finance Ministry and is responsible for promoting coordination and
improvement in the regulation and supervision of activities related to public
savings and offerings. It is composed of representatives of the BCB, CVM,
PREVIC and SUSEP. In 2011 COREMEC created a Subcommittee to Monitor the
National Financial System Stability (SUMEF). SUMEF monitors the markets
under the jurisdiction of each regulator and is intended to keep COREMEC
updated on market interconnection, financial stability and risks that might affect
the financial system as a whole. SUMEF is also intended to expedite information
sharing among the participants. There are also other specific cooperation
agreements (MOUs) between the BCB, the CVM, the SUSEP, and the PREVIC to
coordinate and share information relating to financial conglomerates.
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments Creation of COREMEC in 2006, prior to the 2008 financial crisis, is a noteworthy
innovation. The CVM has developed and is committed to using risk-based
supervision methods. Currently the RBS models emphasize size parameters –
important measure of magnitude that may be less effective measures of
probability. Continued analysis and refinement of these metrics may be useful.
The CVM should also consider whether it is too heavily focused on its RBS
system and should place greater emphasis on questions of interconnectedness,
contagion risks, and exogenous factors that could contribute to systemic
disruptions in the capital markets.
Principle 7. The Regulator should have or contribute to a process to review the perimeter of
regulation regularly.
Description The CVM reports that its Policy and Analysis Office and its Risk Identification
Committee, described in principle 6, are specifically charged with ongoing
responsibility to examine emerging regulatory issues that may be pertinent to
38
matters of investor protection, market efficiency and fairness, and other regulatory
principles, that may be outside the scope of CVM authority. On a national level,
COREMEC has similar authority.
In recent years the CVM has adopted important new Instructions that substantially
alter and update Instructions that had become outmoded. Instruction 480,
described in principle 16 created a new company-based electronic reference form
for listed company disclosure and Instruction 505, described in principle 31,
updates and expands the regulatory requirements for market intermediaries.
The CVM also has demonstrated its capacity to submit proposals to Congress for
changes in relevant laws; notably amendments to the Corporation Law in 2011
and a proposal to enact a new law concerning collateral requirements in the OTC
derivatives market.
The CVM is examining the current lack of regulation over agricultural commodity
spot markets in Brazil.
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments
Principle 8. The Regulator should seek to ensure that conflicts of interest and misalignment of
incentives are avoided, eliminated, disclosed or otherwise managed.
Description The Brazilian financial markets are heavily concentrated with a small number of
universal banks dominating all aspects of the financial services sector. Since 2008
Brazil has had only one national securities exchange. Also large Brazilian listed
companies typically have a single controlling shareholder. In this environment,
there is a substantial potential for conflicts of interest and the misalignment of
incentives by market participants.
The CVM approach to regulating conflicts of interest is heavily reliant on
disclosure of related party or affiliate transactions to clients, investors and the
public. These disclosure requirements are contained in applicable CVM
instructions for CIS operators and managers (CVM 409), listed companies (CVM
480), and independent auditors (CVM 308). The CVM has created a working
group to examine its current instruction pertaining to asset-backed securities
(CVM 489).
As described in principle 22, the CVM has adopted an Instruction to register and
regulate credit-rating agencies that addresses conflicts of interest.
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments The potential for conflicts of interest that could misalign incentives is particularly
significant for Brazilian CIS that are owned by banks. In a concentrated industry
in which mutual funds engage in a substantial volume of daily trading with an
affiliated bank, there is an opportunity for substantial and profitable improper
activities. Trades that are only basis points away from the best price, if frequent,
can result in large profits. Clever trade allocation techniques among a family of
funds may result in one fund performing much better than another. The CVM
regulation requiring firms to have clear allocation policies is a sound approach, but
39
monitoring compliance may be a challenge. Similarly, prospectus and by-law
disclosure permitting funds and related banks to trade may be an ineffective
vehicle for providing investor protection. Detailed record-keeping requirements
coupled with an inspection program may be a burden for the regulator and the
regulated.
Principles for Self-Regulation
Principle 9. Where the regulatory system makes use of Self-Regulatory Organizations (SROs)
that exercise some direct oversight responsibility for their respective areas of
competence, such SROs should be subject to the oversight of the Regulator and
should observe standards of fairness and confidentiality when exercising powers
and delegated responsibilities.
Description The Brazilian system for regulation of capital markets is notable for its creative
use of governmental regulators, licensed self-regulatory organizations directly
overseen by the CVM, and voluntary unofficial organizations that perform SRO
functions but are not subject to formal governmental regulation and oversight.
The BM&F Bovespa BSM and CETIP are the two licensed self-regulatory
organization (SRO). They are legally recognized and required under the Securities
Act (Law 6.385/76, §17.1) to regulate members and trading. Bovespa also owns
and operates its proprietary clearance, settlement, payment and central securities
depository system, regulated primarily by the BCB. As described in principle 33,
Bovespa and CETIP must submit all new rules, rule amendments, changes in
products and services to the CVM for prior approval. Only fees for services are
not subject to prior CVM approval.
Bovespa created BSM as a legally independent entity, wholly owned by Bovespa,
to perform regulatory functions. BSM is governed by its own regulatory board and
it has its own annual budget. BSM has responsibility for surveillance of all
Bovespa trading platforms, oversight and inspection of member firms, monitoring
listed company disclosure, and overall compliance with Bovespa and BSM
regulatory requirements. BSM has a staff of nearly 150.
CVM Instruction 461, chapter 4 establishes self-regulatory requirements for
exchanges. The CVM, as part of its supervisory responsibilities, reviews the BSM
budget and annual working plan. It conducts oversight inspections of BSM. BSM
is required to submit daily, weekly and monthly reports to CVM, discussed in
principle 34. BSM sends immediate referrals to CVM of any trading irregularities
that require CVM investigation. BSM is responsible for the Bovespa fund to
recompense investors who suffered losses due to intermediaries’ misconduct
involving Bovespa-listed or traded securities. Applicants who are denied
compensation may appeal the decision to the CVM. BSM also has responsibility
for imposing disciplinary sanctions on member firms and employees who violate
Bovespa or BSM requirements. These sanctions may not be appealed to the CVM
for review.
CETIP, which is a securities registry and depository for OTC fixed-income
40
securities or derivatives, is also a registered SRO. It has a dedicated regulatory
department, rather than a legally separate entity. This unit also has its own budget
that must be reviewed and approved by the CVM, along with its annual work plan.
The CVM has direct oversight authority, receives daily, weekly and monthly
reports, and conducts on-site inspections. The CVM regulatory staff meets with
BSM and CETIP staff every other month.
The Administration Committee of External Quality Review (CRE) is a
professional organization of accountants. It is registered and supervised by the
CVM. In addition to a CVM license, auditors must be licensed and registered with
CRE. The CRE is funded by its membership and is headed by a Board composed
of four representatives from the CFC and four from the Institute of Independent
Auditors of Brazil (IBRACON).
In addition to these registered and regulated SROs, several member-based
professional or trade organizations perform one or more functions that are self-
regulatory. While the CVM has a variety of working relationships with these
entities, it does not require SRO registration, as they are not exchanges. Also it
does not supervise their activities, or exercise oversight of the policies and
programs they administer. These organizations include Anbima (Brazilian
Financial and Capital Markets Association), Apimec (Association of Investment
Analysts and Capital Markets), and Ancord (National Association of Security
Brokers, Exchange and Commodities).
ANBIMA is the largest of these organizations and has the most extensive member
regulation program. The association represents more than 340 institutions,
including commercial and investment banks, asset managers, brokerage houses
and investment consultants. For example its members operate and manage
virtually all mutual fund assets under management in Brazil. ANBIMA describes
itself as a “private regulator agent, creating and supervising rules according to its
Regulation and Best Practice Codes and works together with the Brazilian
authorities and public institutions aiming to regulate the activities performed in
Brazil’s financial and capital markets” (Anbima website). Anbima is an SRO
affiliate member of IOSCO as is BSM (BM&F Bovespa) and CETIP.
Anbima licenses its members and has issued 11 Codes of Conduct that its
members must comply with. Members who are in compliance may advertise this
to the public through the “Anbima gold seal” on promotional materials. In
conjunction with this program Anbima staff pre-reviews all member mutual fund
advertising materials for compliance with the applicable code. The Anbima codes
are not reviewed or approved by CVM.
The National Monetary Council of Brazil (“CMN”) requires agents acting in the
distribution of financial products within a financial institution to be certified as
41
having proper knowledge of the Brazilian financial markets by an entity with
recognized technical capacity. Anbima has a professional certification process for
persons covered by this requirement. Also, in 2011 Anbima created a special
certification process for mutual fund portfolio members. Anbima members must
have one certified person for its mutual funds. The certification must be renewed
annually.
Anbima has an inspection staff of approximately 30 persons responsible for
conducting off-site and on-site inspections. Members that operate mutual funds for
example must report NAV daily to Anbima. Anbima reviews any funds for which
the NAV or the fund’s performance deviates substantially from comparable funds.
Anbima uses a risk-based supervision model developed for them by PWC. It has
created an industry Monitoring Committee to oversee its risk-based supervision
program. Anbima also provides daily price vectors for members to use when
pricing illiquid debt securities.
Anbima has its own disciplinary program, by which it can impose sanctions
including monetary fines, and suspension or expulsion from Anbima. Anbima has
adopted a Code of Conduct that governs its disciplinary program. Anbima
disciplinary actions may be resolved through an administrative hearing or through
a negotiated settlement. In both cases the final action must be reviewed and
approved by a Judiciary Counsel, a majority of whom must be professionals not
affiliated with the financial institutions. Anbima sanctions are final and may not be
appealed to the CVM. The CVM has an agreement with Anbima that it will not
take separate disciplinary action, if Anbima has acted; although CVM may impose
sanctions on responsible individuals who are not sanctioned by Anbima.
Anbima performs another SRO function pursuant to a written agreement with
CVM. Anbima staff review all listed company prospectuses and disclosure reports
in addition to CVM review. Under this agreement the 20-day statutory review
period begins when the issuer submits the prospectus for a follow on offering of
securities to Anbima, and CVM has 7 days for review after Anbima.
Apimec and Ancord are professional membership organizations that play a role in
the qualification and licensing of individuals. Apimec administers a qualification
examination to persons seeking a CVM license as a market analyst, as required
under CVM Instruction 483. Ancord has similar responsibility for persons seeking
an autonomous agent license.
Assessment Partly Implemented
Comments Principle 9 recognizes that there is considerable diversity in the regulatory roles
and responsibilities of SROs around the world and Brazil is an example of how
different SRO models may be used in an effective, collaborative way. The
Brazilian regulatory structure makes extensive use of self-regulatory organizations
– both legally recognized and regulated SROs and unofficially recognized and
unregulated SROs. However IOSCO Principle No. 9 requires SROs to be subject
42
to the oversight of primary regulators where they exercise some direct oversight
responsibility for their respective areas. As the IOSCO Methodology provides
“‘Inappropriate use’ of an SRO by extension might include the exercise of SRO
functions by an unauthorized entity or without regulatory oversight”.
The CVM licensing and oversight process for BSM/Bovespa and for CETIP is
sound and is fully compliant with the IOSCO principle for regulatory oversight of
SROs. The partly implemented assessment is based upon the lack of governmental
oversight of the Anbima, Apimec and Ancord programs. In reaching this
conclusion, it should be stressed that the program administered by Anbima
appears to be sound and well constructed. What is missing is an appropriate level
of oversight by a government regulator.
Principles for the Enforcement of Securities Regulation
Principle 10. The regulator should have comprehensive inspection, investigation and
surveillance powers.
Description The Securities Act (Law 6.385/76) provides the CVM with comprehensive
inspection, investigation and surveillance powers. The CVM may monitor all
activities and services of securities markets on a permanent basis, obtaining from
market participants all information and documents that it may deem necessary.
The entities regulated by CVM include investment banks, brokers, dealers,
exchanges, organized over-the-counter-markets, custodians, clearing and
settlement entities, fund managers, financial analysts and independent auditors.
Under the Securities Act the CVM may oversee and regulate the activities and
services of the securities market, as well as the disclosure of information regarding
the market, individuals participating in it and the securities traded thereon (§8,
item III). It may examine and extract examples of accounting records, books or
documents, including electronic programs, magnetic and optical files, as well as
any other files, and also the paperwork of independent auditors (§9, item I). The
law contains a five-year record retention requirement.
The Money Laundry Act (Law 9.613/98, §9 and 10) requires entities regulated by
the CVM to keep records of any transaction in Real or foreign currency, securities,
bonds and notes, bullion, or any asset convertible into money above an amount set
by the CVM. The CVM also requires regulated entities to identify their clients and
keep their client register updated. CVM Instruction 301 and CVM Instruction 387
specify rules related to the complete client identification In 2011 CVM adopted a
new Instruction (505) which expands the record keeping and internal control
requirements for market intermediaries; requiring complete client identification
records and a new requirement that all client trading instructions must be recorded.
The CVM has the legal authority to conduct off-site or on-site inspections of all
regulated entities, including listed companies, on a scheduled or surprise basis,
with or without a subpoena. It has the authority to require the production of
records and testimony. It may conduct investigations to determine whether
43
violations of the law or CVM instructions have occurred, by regulated entities,
employees or third parties not directly licensed or registered with the CVM.
CVM has its own market surveillance program that has access to trading on
Bovespa and CETIP. BSM and CETIP have primary responsibility for real-time
market surveillance, and CVM staff focuses on follow up investigations of
suspicious trading anomalies and investigation of suspicious activities reported by
BSM and CETIP.
Both organizations must comply with CVM regulations to conduct surveillance
and to monitor compliance with Bovespa and CETIP trading requirements.
CVM does not have inspection and investigation authority for market intermediary
capital compliance and related prudential supervision, or for oversight of the
secondary market clearance, settlement, payment and depository process. BCB has
exclusive responsibility in these areas. As discussed in principle 30, BCB applies
one set of capital standards to all financial institutions, including banks and market
intermediaries. If an intermediary is part of a bank conglomerate BCB requires
consolidated financial reports, including a daily risk-weighted financial adequacy
calculation and a monthly detailed report (quarterly for smaller institutions). BCB
also has exclusive authority to regulate the government securities market,
including sales practices.
CVM and BCB signed an MOU in 2011 to exchange information. This is
particularly important for CVM access to bank records.
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments Following the adoption of the BCB--CVM MOU, CVM reports that it has been
successful in obtaining bank record information, typically by first obtaining a
court order.
Principle 11. The regulator should have comprehensive enforcement powers.
Description Pursuant to the Securities Law (6.385/76, §11), the CVM may take administrative
enforcement action for violations of any provision of the Securities Law, the
Corporation Law, CVM regulations, or any other provisions that are under its
responsibility. The CVM has authority to impose administratively a warning, a
fine, a suspension from serving as a director of market intermediaries and public
companies, temporary disqualification up to 20 years, from occupying managerial
posts in market intermediaries and public companies, and suspension or
cancellation of market intermediaries’ licenses issued by CVM. The CVM and
Bovespa both have the authority to suspend trading of a security in the secondary
market and halt or suspend the initial offering of a security, including shares in a
mutual fund.
While the CVM can require a violator to recompense defrauded persons as a
condition to a negotiated settlement, it cannot impose this requirement in a
litigated action.
The CVM has broad investigative powers. It has the authority to inspect all
44
records of, and compel any information from, any individual or legal entity and
access the information at any time. This provision applies to all non-regulated
individuals or entities, as well as to any government agency or public corporation
if the testimony or information is necessary to complete the investigation.
When the CVM is unable to obtain information the Securities Law empowers it to
seek assistance from another governmental entity. In addition, CVM can seek a
court order for special cases (e.g., telephone records) or when information is for
any reason denied. The Securities Act also provides that the CVM, the BCB, the
SUSEP, PREVIC and the Federal Revenue Office must share and exchange
information. CVM has cooperation agreements with these agencies. In addition,
CVM also has agreements with the Federal Police, the Public Prosecutor's Office,
the Treasury, and the National Secretariat of Public Security (a division of the
Ministry of Justice) for information exchange, technical cooperation and
enforcement. Under Complimentary Law 105/01 (§9.2), whenever the CVM
obtains any evidence of unlawful activity, it must notify the relevant governmental
agency in charge of investigating and enforcing the pertinent law. This includes a
legal duty to inform the Federal Attorney’s Office of possible criminal violations
of the Securities and Corporation Laws.
CVM Instruction 480 requires public companies to disclose the identity of their
controlling shareholders. If it is a legal entity, companies have to identify its direct
and indirect controlling individuals. Public companies also are required to disclose
any shareholder or group of shareholders holding more than 5% of any kind of
shares. (Law 6.385/76, §9.I and III).
The Brazilian Constitution guarantees persons a private right of action. In addition
to this fundamental right, the Novo Mercado listing rules requires N.M. companies
to agree to binding arbitration of any disputes with its shareholders.
Private lawsuits against administrators (directors and executives) of public
companies can be brought by minority shareholders, similar to US-style derivative
lawsuits. However, the effectiveness of these lawsuits is impaired by the fact that
they must be approved by the shareholders meeting (not the board as in the US).
Controlling shareholders are thus able to block such actions. As a result, lawsuits
against directors are rare. Because of these difficulties Brazil has received a low
score (3) for ease of private litigation in the annual IFC Doing Business Report.
This compares unfavorably to the rest of Latin America (6) and OECD countries
(7).
Finally, as mentioned in principle 9, injured investors can file a complaint before
the BSM Bovespa Investor Compensation Mechanism (MCR) for compensation of
losses suffered as a result of actions or omissions of market intermediaries in
connection with a Bovespa security. The maximum compensation is 70,000BR.
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments While there remains some uncertainty about the capacity of the CVM to obtain
45
through court order records from third parties, such as internet service providers,
the CVM has been successful in recent matters obtaining phone records. It also
reports that the Federal Police and Federal Attorney have the capacity to obtain
this information and have demonstrated a willingness to assist the CVM when
necessary.
The maximum compensation from the MCR appears to be too small to adequately
protect investor accounts. The CVM should examine the issue closely and
consider directing Bovespa to increase the maximum size of compensation
awards.
The availability of private litigation options in Brazil could be improved.
Principle 12. The regulatory system should ensure an effective and credible use of inspection,
investigation, surveillance and enforcement powers and implementation of an
effective compliance program.
Description
The CVM has a program in place for surveillance of the securities market, which
covers issuers, market intermediaries, collective investment schemes, portfolio and
fund managers, stock exchanges and all other market participants. As described
previously, primary surveillance responsibility is with regulatory staff of BSM and
CETIP. In December 2011 CVM finished the implementation of an integrated
surveillance system that analyses information coming from CETIP and
BM&FBOVESPA. The system collects and records all the information relating to
both markets in order to detect and identify suspect situations of market
manipulation and abuse. It generates a list of exceptions, showing unusual
movements in price, volume and liquidity. In Bovespa’s derivatives market, the
CVM relies on an electronic system that is delivered by BM&F in T+1 (the next
day). Primary real-time surveillance at Bovespa and CETIP is the responsibility of
their regulatory staff.
In 2007 CVM published Deliberation 521/07 creating a risk-based supervision
system (SBR) that includes off-site and on-Site inspections by a CVM Department
with primary responsibility (SFI). A Risk Management Committee (CGR) was
also created that is responsible for implementation and monitoring of SBR,
through a Biennial Plan of Supervision that must be submitted to the CVM Board
for approval. A comprehensive inspection manual was developed with assistance
from FINRA, the U.S. SRO. The manual covers all types of regulated entities and
contains very detailed inspection protocols for each category of entity. The CVM
conducts ad hoc or unscheduled inspections based on risks and complaints as well
as scheduled inspections selected through its risk parameters. It also maintains
records of inspection results.
The CVM SBR is heavily weighted toward the size of an entity and the total
number of investors or clients. For example, the ten largest mutual fund operators,
46
which collectively control over 90% of assets under management, are reviewed on
a two-year cycle. Other funds are grouped by size and risk parameters into seven
risk categories and a sample form each category is inspected, as resources permit.
In addition the SRI periodically conducts special issue inspections in which a
specific area of operation or regulatory concern is inspected at several firms.
The inspection program inspects some of each group or type of regulated entity,
Besides mutual fund groups, this includes broker-dealers (market intermediaries),
autonomous agents, who are contractors of intermediaries and function in a
manner similar to an introducing broker in the U.S., transfer agents and
custodians, and licensed auditors. Auditor inspections are conducted in
coordination with the CVM office responsible for accounting and auditing. CVM
also conducts a limited number of on-site inspections of publicly listed companies.
Since 2008 the CVM has demonstrated an increasing capacity to be a credible
enforcement presence in Brazil. The CVM has developed a negotiated settlement
process to successfully conclude its investigation. Under CVM Deliberation 390,
individuals or entities may agree to settle a matter by agreeing to a consent decree
(termo de compromisso or TC). The CVM may agree to a TC for any violation of
the Securities Law or Corporation Law and CVM instructions. It is not available
for violations of the Anti- Money Laundering law. As part of the TC, the party
must agree to cease the improper conduct and to compensate victims of the
misconduct or correct the misconduct. Victim compensation is not a remedy
available to the CVM in a litigate proceeding. In a TC, a party does not admit to
the violations, but if the terms of the TC are not complied with, the CVM may
reinstitute an enforcement action. All TCs are publicly disclosed. The terms of the
TC must be reviewed by the CVM Consent Decree Committee and submitted to
the CVM Board for final approval.
The TC program has been successful. In 2009 there were 58 TC, involving 84
persons resulting in 11 million BR in judgments. In 2010 this increased to 64 TC,
141 persons and 57 million BR. In 2011, there were 45 TC, with 93 persons and
175 million BR. However one action against a corporation that committed fraud in
a takeover of another corporation paid a fine of 150 million BR.
The CVM has successfully resolved several important cases through TC. For
example, in 2010 the CVM settled an insider trading case against a major
international investment bank for a judgment of 19 million BR. Also in 2010 four
directors of a global Brazilian company settled a case for 15 million BR involving
an illegal related party transaction.
The CVM continues to litigate some cases where settlement negotiations are
47
unsuccessful or inappropriate. In 2010 the number of fines rose from 115 to 126,
totaling R$575 million (about USD 320 million).
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments Since the 2002 FSAP the CVM has made substantial progress in building credible
surveillance, inspection, investigation and enforcement programs. Overall the
CVM has demonstrated that it has built a successful surveillance, inspection and
enforcement program. This is consistent with views expressed by members of the
industry in interviews. One aspect of the program that may warrant CVM
consideration is the extensive reliance on monetary fines and the apparently
limited use of suspensions or disqualifications. Sometimes a firm may willingly
agree to a money fine as a “cost of doing business” in order to avoid a more severe
impact from a suspension or disqualification. This comment is speculative.
Principles for Cooperation in Regulation
Principle 13. The regulator should have authority to share both public and non-public
information with domestic and foreign counterparts.
Description The Securities Act (Law 6385/76, §28) (the “Securities Act”) explicitly directs the
BCB, the CVM, the Pension Funds Agency (Previc), the Federal Internal Revenue
Authority and the Superintendence of Private Insurance (SUSEP) to have a system
for the exchange of information relating to the supervision in their respective
areas. The same article explicitly provides that the Bank Secrecy Act (Law
105/2001) may not be used to prevent the exchange of information.
The Securities Act (§10) also provides clear authority to the CVM to enter into
agreements with foreign regulators and international organization for “assistance
and cooperation in the investigations relating to infringement of regulations
pertaining to the securities market occurring in Brazil and abroad”. These
provisions do not require the CVM to obtain approval from other government
agencies or the judiciary.
The Bank Secrecy Act imposes some limitations on the unlimited exchange of
information covered by that law. One limitation pertains to the unsolicited
exchange of information. The Bank Secrecy Act requires a Memorandum of
Understanding (MoU) between the bodies for covered information.
A second limitation pertains to foreign requests concerning matters in which the
CVM does not have an independent interest. However when this circumstance
arises, the foreign request provides a basis for the CVM to open its own inquiry to
satisfy the requirement.
The Bank Secrecy Act also affects the capacity of the CVM to obtain commercial
banking records concerning an individual or entity. While BCB and the CVM
have an MoU that specifically addresses this problem, BCB has a strong
preference that the CVM obtain a judicial order requiring the production of the
information. The CVM reports that obtaining a judicial order has not been a
problem and it has been successful all of the last five occasions when this was
48
necessary.
Fully Implemented
Comments
Principle 14. Regulators should establish information sharing mechanisms that set out when and
how they will share both public and non-public information with their domestic
and foreign counterparts.
Description As explained in principle 13, the CVM has clear authority to enter into
information sharing mechanisms with both domestic and foreign regulatory
bodies. In 2010, the CVM and Bacen signed an MoU. The CVM also has written
agreements with Previc, the Federal Internal Revenue Authority, SUSEP, the
National Treasury Authority, the Federal Prosecutors’ Office, and other agencies.
The CVM has written agreements with numerous foreign regulatory bodies. It is a
signatory to the IOSCO Multilateral Memorandum of Understanding (MMOU).
The CVM has also signed almost 28 MOUs with foreign counterparts. The CVM
stated that these MOUs follow a common standard “that states clearly and in a
detailed manner under what conditions and circumstances the authorities would
share public and non-public information”. This includes the exchange of “fit and
proper” information for licensing purposes.
While the CVM has the capacity to exchange information with foreign regulators,
the Bovespa is limited in this regard. While many of the largest Brazilian
companies have ADR’s listed in the U.S., Bovespa lacks the authority to sign a
written information exchange agreements with foreign exchanges. Bovespa reports
that this problem is addressed by requesting the CVM to obtain needed
information.
CVM staff have a legal duty to protect the confidentiality of information obtained
in their official duties, unless it is disclosed during an enforcement or legal
proceeding. This applies to information obtained from other domestic and foreign
regulators. The CVM reports that it includes a similar confidentiality provision in
its MoUs.
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments
Principle 15. The regulatory system should allow for assistance to be provided to foreign
regulators who need to make inquiries in the discharge of their functions and
exercise of their powers.
Description As explained in principles 13 and 14 the CVM has the necessary legal authority to
exchange information with foreign authorities and it has written bilateral
agreements with, and through the IOSCO MMOU, a wide array of foreign
regulators.
While the CVM can obtain without a court order any information contained in the
records of registered entities such as market intermediaries, CIS, Bovespa, and
49
audit firms, it must obtain a judicial order for confidential banking records. As
explained previously it has been successful in the last five occasions over two
years. CVM reports that the process has not been unduly delayed. The MoU
between the CVM and BCB provides for a 15-day response to any request.
One limitation that exists concerns information from third parties not a part of the
financial sector, such as telephone companies and internet service providers. The
CVM lacks a clear mandate to obtain this information. If it is required it must act
through the Federal Attorneys Agency as a potential criminal matter. The CVM
may compel individuals to testify in its investigations and share the information
with foreign regulators. Persons who refuse to testify may be fined by the CVM or
referred to the Federal Attorney’s office for possible criminal action.
Assessment Fully implemented
Comments While the CVM has demonstrated its capacity to provide assistance to foreign
regulators sufficiently to warrant a fully implemented assessment, there is some
uncertainty as to its ability to obtain telephone and internet records. As the
financial market move to a fully electronic environment, this information will
become indispensable for the effective investigation and enforcement of the law.
This issue was previously discussed in principle 10
Principles for Issuers
Principle 16. There should be full, accurate and timely disclosure of financial results, risk and
other information that is material to investors’ decisions.
Description Issuer disclosure is governed by the Securities Law (6385/76) and the
Corporations Law (6404/76), and CVM Instructions 480, 358 and 400. These laws
and regulations require full, timely and accurate disclosure of financial results and
other information material to investors.
Securities offerings regulation
CVM instruction 400 regulates the public offer for the distribution of securities in
primary and secondary markets, setting conditions applicable to public securities
offerings, the content and distribution of prospectuses and other relevant offering
documents. There are separate review procedures for initial public offerings and
for subsequent public offerings of securities, with different processing timelines.
Securities offerings that are not an IPO may be submitted to Anbima for its prior
review. When this happens, the CVM review time is shortened to 7 days and the
20-day statutory period begins with the Anbima filing. CVM staff may require
issuers to provide additional information or correct misstatements in all offering
documents.
The CVM also has adopted a limited qualified investor offering process (CVM
476) in which companies may issue securities to 20 investors (one mutual fund
group with multiple funds is one investor) based on a solicitation to a maximum of
50 persons. The minimum investment per investor is one million reais. Purchasers
are required to hold securities for a minimum of ninety days. There have been a
50
few offerings to date, although interest is growing.
CVM also has a shelf registration offering process for issuers (CVM 400 §11).
The registration receives expedited review, 10 days by CVM, and may stay
effective for two years. The process has not been used frequently.
Instruction 480 created a new category of company – Issuers with market
exposure. These companies have equity listed on an exchange for at least three
years, have timely filed reports within the past twelve months and have a market
capitalization of 5 billion reais. These companies are eligible for an expedited 5
working day review by CVM of securities offerings.
The CVM has broad authority to reject a securities offering. It may be rejected for
a failure to provide required information or if the CVM finds “unfeasibility or
recklessness of its Founders” (CVM 400 §16). The CVM may also suspend up to
30 days or cancel an offering if it is conducted in a manner contrary to the stated
offering or if it is fraudulent or contrary to CVM regulations (CVM 400 §19).
Periodic disclosure requirements
The CVM requires companies to file a full range of disclosure reports, including
quarterly reports, special event reports and annual reports. In 2009, when the
CVM issued Instruction 480, it created a new disclosure form for companies with
securities listed for trading on a regulated securities market. The traditional set of
disclosure requirements based on the Corporation Law was augmented by a new
set of requirements that are filed on an electronic formatted filing system.
Instruction 480 has two types of companies. Filers in category A (approximately
500 issuers) have issued equity securities listed on Bovespa and category B
(approximately 100 companies) have issued fixed income securities or other
instruments that are not convertible into equity.
The Reference Form is structured around specific disclosure requirements: (i)
Standardized Financial Statement Form – DFP; (ii) Registration Form; and (iii)
Reference Form. Issuers are required to disclose on the Reference Form the
following: (i) description of risk factors; (ii) description of material litigation for
the issuer or its subsidiaries; (iii) qualitative and quantitative analysis of market
risks. The DFP form must be filed within 3 months of fiscal year end and
information must be updated within 7 business days of specified material events
(CVM 480 §24.3).
The ITR form replaces the quarterly report for listed companies. It must be filed
within one month of the end of the quarter and contain financial statements
reviewed by the issuers’ independent auditor. The Corporation Law requirement
that public companies must publish its annual report and financial statements in at
51
least two national newspapers continues to apply.
Notifications of Material Information must be filed with the CVM and made
public “immediately” (CVM 358 §3 and 5). Material events are defined as any
information that could affect the price of a security, influence an investor’s
decision to buy or to sell or to exercise any rights. Instruction 358 requires the
issuer to release immediately a notification of Material Information to the market,
in a clear and precise way, in language considered adequate to investors. A
Company may refrain from disclosing information if it would adversely affect the
company, but the information must be made public if there is a sudden change in
the market price, liquidity or traded volume of the company’s stock (CVM 358
§6). Both the CVM and the Bovespa have the authority to temporarily suspend
trading in a company stock, although this is exercised very infrequently (Law
6.385/76, §9.1).
The CVM rules (CVM 358 §13) contain a broad prohibition on insider trading by
corporate management, Board members, owners of 5% of stock, advisors and
others with access, and persons who receive the information from covered
persons. The same rule also imposes a trading blackout period for 15 days before
the release of quarterly or annual reports. Violations may be sanctioned by the
CVM administratively or by criminal prosecution by the Brazilian Federal
Attorney’s Office.
The CVM review process for filings includes a review of both offering documents
and company reference forms. The CVM has a staff of 55 divided into five groups
responsible for review of issuer disclosure documents. All IPO filings are
reviewed and the staff applies a risk-based approach to selectively review other
company reports. All registered companies are placed in 8 risk categories,
primarily ranked by market cap and number of shareholders. The largest
companies are reviewed every year and a sample from each of the other categories
is reviewed annually. The staff will also occasionally conduct special subject
reviews of one issue across a large sample of companies. In recent years the staff
has examined subjects such as intangible asset accounting practices, financial
instrument valuation, and derivatives exposure. Based on these reviews a small
number of matters are referred for further investigation by enforcement staff.
The Corporations Law and CVM regulations provide that the CVM staff may
request amendments or corrections to issuer filings. Law 6.385/76, in article 9,
empowers the CVM to require publicly held companies to restate their financial
statements, reports or released information. CVM instruction 400 §56 imposes
liability on the issuer for the accuracy of reports and imposes a due diligence
obligation on underwriters.
52
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments The company-based Reference form concept created in Instruction 480 has been
discussed in other countries and is an interesting and promising innovation. Some
persons who were interviewed suggested that the CVM should consider fine-
tuning the process to streamline the length of mandatory disclosure. Also the
automated filing system requires companies to manually enter all financial
statement information, a highly time-consuming process that creates risks of errors
that may adversely affect both the company and its investors.
With the advent of the electronic filing process the CVM should recommend a
change in the Corporation Law to eliminate the requirement that public companies
publish their entire annual report in two national newspapers. This is an expensive
requirement that no longer serves a sound public purpose.
As discussed in other principles, the CVM RBS should carefully consider whether
the size of a corporation, without consideration of other factors, is an optimal risk
parameter for examination selection.
Principle 17. Holders of securities in a company should be treated in a fair and equitable
manner.
Description Problems with corporate governance and the fair treatment of minority
shareholders have been an important issue in Brazil for many years. In the past it
was common for public companies to issue large quantities of non-voting stock,
up to twice the amount of voting shares. In this structure the holders of 17% of the
company’s stock (51% of voting shares if non-voting shares represented 67%)
could control a company. In 2001 amendments to the Corporation Law mandated
that non-voting shares could not exceed 50% of the total of shares (with a
grandfather clause for companies that had a higher percentage of non-voting
shares). The Novo Mercado listing standards prohibit the use of non-voting shares.
The Corporation Law provides low thresholds for sound corporate governance. It
does not have any independent director requirements nor a minimum number of
meetings required for the Board of Directors in a year (other than the annual
shareholders meeting). The corporation is also not required to have a Board Audit
Committee. Instead there is a requirement for a Committee Fiscal. This committee
is very different from an Audit Committee. It is not a Board Committee and its
members may be third parties selected by a vote of shareholders, with substantial
minority shareholders entitled to a seat; no manager (or his/her relatives) of the
same corporate group could be a member of the Committee Fiscal. A group of
voting shareholders with at least ten percent (10%) of the share capital may elect a
member of the Committee Fiscal.
Annual meetings must be announced at least fifteen days in advance (second
notice 8 days in advance). The CVM has the authority to extend this period for up
to 30 additional days at the request of any shareholder if the meeting will consider
53
complex issues or if a required document or information related to a proposal is
missing. Public companies must file the minutes of the annual meeting at the
CVM no later than seven business days after the meeting. A company must
identify proxies to represent votes for, against or abstaining from an action. Any
shareholder of 0.5% of shares may request a list of shareholder names and
addresses for purposes of soliciting proxies or request to be included in the
electronic proxy system (CVM 481). Brazilian law requires all shares to be
registered. CVM instruction 481 imposes disclosure obligations for all items to be
considered at a shareholder meeting.
The Corporation Law imposes broad liability on company officers for fraudulent
or ultra vires acts (Law 6.404/76 §158). Under article 159 of the law, a corporation
may bring a civil action against any administrator for the losses caused to the
corporation's property. In particular, the shareholder meeting must approve that
action and were the company fail to initiate the legal action within three months,
then any shareholder is entitled to do so. Furthermore, there is a provision for
shareholder derivative actions brought by shareholders owning 5% of capital on
behalf of the company. Because this requires a shareholder vote it is difficult to
use.
The Corporation Law provides minority shareholders some forms of protection in
cases of change of control. For example the Law (§254-A) requires in a change of
control, that the purchaser must conduct a tender offer to acquire the remaining
voting shares for at the least 80 percent of the amount paid for shares comprising
the controlling block. Alternatively minority shareholders can choose to retain
their shares if they pay a premium equal to the difference between the price of the
control block shares and the market price. There are no “tag along” protection
requirements for holders of non-voting shares. The Law also requires a mandatory
tender offer in a going private transaction (§4.4). Minority shareholders
representing 10 percent of the free float may call for a special shareholder meeting
to request a new price evaluation. In these situations only the non-control
shareholders are entitled to vote (§4A). A mandatory tender offer is also required
if, through open market purchases, the controlling shareholder reduces the
company free float below 33%. CVM Instruction 361 requires that tender offers
must be provided to all shareholders, with equal treatment for all shareholders in a
class.
The Law also includes provisions allowing shareholders with 10% of stock that is
voted to require a company to permit cumulative voting. Further, the law also
provides for minority shareholders voting in the removal of a specific director.
Shareholders with 15% of voting shares are entitled to elect one Board Director. In
practice the use of cumulative voting is very rare, according to a 2009 academic
54
study.
In response to the limited protections in the Corporations Law, the CVM and
Bovespa attempted to improve corporate governance and minority shareholder
protection rights through listing standards for a new equity market. In 2001,
BOVESPA created the Novo Mercado (NM) and two additional listing segments
with minority shareholder protections and corporate governance standards (level 1
and level 2) that are higher than the Corporation Law. All three levels require a
minimum 25% free float. Level 1 listing requirements require more extensive
company disclosure, including quarterly reports with financial statements and
information on affiliate transactions but do not require changes in the Board of
Directors or give more rights to investors. Level 2 requires companies to arbitrate
disputes with shareholders, grants special voting rights to “PN” (typically a form
of preferred share with limited or no voting rights) shareholders on certain
fundamental decisions, and provides a 70% “tag along” rights for “PN”
shareholders. Level II companies must have a minimum of five Board members
and 20% must be independent. The Novo Mercado has the highest standards.
Companies may not issue non-voting shares and the company Board must have
20% independent directors. In the event of a tender offer, there must be full tag
along rights and an independent pricing valuation in the event of delisting. The
company must have at least a 25% free float and provide for arbitration of
company disputes.
The creation of the Novo Mercado, with its higher standards for corporate
governance and minority shareholder protection, has contributed to the growth of
the Brazilian equity market. In the period 2009-2011, 25 of 28 IPOs were listed on
N.M. The number of Bovespa N.M. listed companies has grown from 44 in 2005
to 125 in 2011. Over the same period Level 1 listings grew from 37 to 38 and
Level 2 listings increased from 14 to 19. These companies represent 66% of total
listed market cap and 76% of total traded value on Bovespa. The number of
traditional listings has remained largely flat.
Since the adoption of the higher listing standards for N.M. and Levels I and II,
efforts to make further improvements in corporate governance through listing
standards have had some, limited, success. In 2010 a package of recommendations
was prepared and submitted to a vote of N.M. companies (required to effect
changes).
Several changes were approved by the affected listing groups and added to
Bovespa listing standards. For example companies listed in Levels I and II and the
N.M. must have separate CEO and Board Directors. These corporations must also
adopt a Code of Conduct and must adopt a policy on stock trading for controlling
shareholders, board members and any other consulting or technical committee
established by corporate bylaws. Other changes include a prohibition on bylaw
55
clauses that limit the number of votes of a shareholder or group of shareholders to
percentages under 5% of total common shares, except in cases of privatizations or
when specific laws or regulation apply. Also prohibited are bylaw clauses that (i)
require a qualified majority to decide on matters that have to be submitted to
general shareholder meeting or (ii) that impose burdens on shareholders that voted
in favor of withdrawing or modifying bylaw clauses.
Three key changes were proposed but not approved:
- An increase in the number of independent board members from 20 to 30%
for Novo Mercado and Level II and the addition of the independence
requirement for Level I;
- A requirement for an audit committee comprised of a minimum of three
members elected by the Board of Directors, of whom at least one must be
an independent board member.
- A significant change in the takeover rules to require a mandatory bid after
a shareholder hits 30% of outstanding shares (down from 50%).
CVM rules require prompt disclosure of beneficial ownership by a public
company and prompt updating. Direct or indirect controlling shareholders, Board
members, Inspection committee members and 5% shareowners, must disclose
shareholder ownership information, including acquisition, transfer or changes.
This information must be submitted to the company within 5 days of any change.
The company must file this information and publicly disclose it within ten days of
the end of the month in which the transaction occurred. This information must also
be disclosed in the company Reference Form, under CVM Instruction 480. This
information is available to the public only in a consolidated form, on the CVM’s
website, through the IPE system (Periodical and Non-Recurrent Information
System). The CVM has the authority to sanction persons that do not comply.
Companies must also disclose on the Reference Form information on the
company’s policies on related-party transactions, related-party transactions during
the past three years, and policies to avoid conflicts of interest. Brazil has adopted
the IFRS principle on disclosure of related party transactions and N.M. companies
must disclose this in quarterly reports..
Assessment Partly Implemented
Comments The protection of minority shareholder rights continues to be an important
regulatory challenge. The creation of Novo Mercado and Level I and II listing
requirements that provide greater protection for minority shareholders than the
Corporation Law has been successful and the number of companies that comply is
steadily increasing as a result of IPOs. However, the weaknesses of the
Corporation Law, which govern the traditional listing companies have not been
addressed and it still controls governance and minority rights for a substantial
portion of Brazilian public companies, including several of its largest companies.
Full tag along rights in change of control transactions are not provided to
56
shareholders of companies that have not adopted the higher listing standards of
Novo Mercado. These companies represent 47% of the total market capitalization
of Bovespa. Under the IOSCO Methodology an inability to satisfy key question
3(d), fair and equitable treatment of minority shareholders in change of control
transactions, warrants a not implemented assessment. However, because
companies with nearly half of the total market capitalization have adopted full tag
along rights, balancing these two categories justifies a higher, partly implemented
assessment.
A Corporate Governance ROSC has been conducted as a part of this FSAP and it
provides a detailed analysis of further reforms that should be considered.
Principle 18. Accounting standards used by issuers to prepare financial statements should be of
a high and internationally acceptable quality.
Description The Corporation Law (6404/1976) requires all public offerings of securities and
all issuers of securities to register with the CVM. CVM Instructions 400
(offerings) and 480 (issuers) requires inclusion of audited financial statements,
audited by a firm licensed by the CVM, and prepared in accordance with IFRS
standards. In 2007 Brazil amended the Corporation Law by Law No. 11638/2007,
and established a national accounting standard setter, the Comitê de
Pronunciamentos Contábeis (CPC). The CPC formally adopted IFRS as the
Brazilian accounting standard with a transition period from 2008-2010, with
almost no deviations (an isolated change concerning valuation of mineral rights
that affected Petrobras). The CVM endorsed these standards and mandated
adoption by public companies for fiscal year 2010. All CPC pronouncements must
be approved by the CVM, typically following a public exposure period (CVM
Deliberation 520).
CPC has a governance board whose membership includes representatives from the
public corporation’s association (ABRASCA), the accounting and auditing
profession licensing body (CFC), the Institute of Independent Auditors of Brazil
(IBRACON), BM&FBovespa, and the academic community (FIPECAFI).
Brazilian regulators participate in a non-voting capacity (CVM, SUSEP, Central
Bank, Revenue Dept), as does the Brazilian Bank Federation (FEBRABAN).
There are no voting members who represent the general public or investors.
Instead the association of securities analysts, APIMEC, is a voting member. The
CPC is funded with funds collected from the settlement of CVM enforcement
actions and from fees paid by the accounting/auditing industry. To reduce the
appearance of industry control, the Foundation for CPC Support (FACPC) was
created to provide a conduit for continued industry funding support.
CPC Pronouncement No. 26 (equivalent to IAS 1) requires public companies to
prepare and submit a full set of financial statements including: a balance sheet or
statement of financial position; a statement of the results of operations; a statement
57
of cash flow; and a statement of changes in ownership equity. As discussed in
principle 16, the CVM has created a company-based disclosure system (CVM
480) that requires public companies to annually submit annual audited financial
statements on its DFP form. These must be filed within 3 months of fiscal year
end. The ITR form replaces the quarterly report for listed companies. It must be
filed within one month of the end of the quarter and contain financial statements
reviewed by the issuer’s independent auditor. Category A filers (companies with
equities listed on Bovespa) must submit consolidated financial statements.
In addition to the external auditor, the CVM staff selectively review public
company compliance with applicable accounting standards as part of its risk-based
company review process (discussed in principle 16). CVM can require companies
to correct or restate financial statements and it can bring enforcement actions for
violations of the law or CVM instructions.
CVM Instruction 480 (§27) requires foreign issuers listed in Brazil to file financial
standards compliant with Brazilian CPC/IFRS written in Portuguese and presented
in Brazilian reais. The financials must be audited by a Brazilian auditor, or by an
external auditor registered with the CVM, or by an external auditor that is
registered with an equivalent regulator in the country where the issuer is
headquartered. Foreign issuers of Level I Brazilian Depository Receipts (BDR) are
exempt from issuer registration (CVM 480, §7).
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments Brazil has adopted and successfully implemented IFRS. Interestingly the BCB
continues to require all financial institutions to submit reports using its own
accounting standards. As a result all financial institutions that are public
companies prepare and publish financial statements using IFRS in addition to the
BCB-based financial statements. The BCB has a project to harmonize the two
reporting requirements.
Several issues regarding the standard setting board should be considered. The
Board is funded in part by the accounting profession and its Board does not have
any truly public members. The APIMEC is an association of securities analysts.
Final approval by the CVM largely offsets these issues of independence.
Principles for Auditors, Credit Ratings Agencies, and Other Information Service Providers
Principle 19. Auditors should be subject to adequate levels of oversight.
Description Under the Brazilian supervisory model for independent auditors, the CVM is the
final supervisory authority for the licensing and regulation of the audit profession
(Securities Law 6385/1976). In 2010, Law 12249/2010 created the Federal
Accountancy Profession Organization – Conselho Federal de Contabilidade (CFC)
as the professional organization that sets auditing standards in Brazil. Brazilian
standards largely follow International Auditing Standards (IAS). CVM Instruction
308 governs the auditing and supervisory process. Article 21 of Instruction 308
requires auditors to comply with the audit standards promulgated by CFC and
58
IBRACON. The CVM reports that it is in line with COSRA Principles for the
Oversight of Independent Auditors.
In addition to a CVM license, auditors must be licensed and registered by the
Administration Committee of External Quality Review (CRE). The CRE is
supervised by the CVM and is headed by a Board composed of four
representatives from the CFC and four from the Institute of independent Auditors
of Brazil (IBRACON). All Board members have to be auditors registered on the
National Registry of Independent Auditors and licensed by the CVM. Members
serve three-year renewable terms. The CRE administers qualifying examinations
and licenses all accountants and auditors in Brazil. In Brazil, persons must pass a
series of qualifying exams to be a professional accountant and or an auditor of a
public company (CVM Instruction 308, §30; CFC Resolutions 821 and 965).
Applicants must have a university degree in accounting to sit for the first level
professional accounting exam. In addition, applicants to be auditors must have 5
years of auditing experience (CVM 308 §4-V). Finally, there is a 40-hour/year
continuing professional education requirement. Of the approximately 500,000
licensed accountants, some 4,000 are members of the CNAI—the CFC’s National
Practice for Auditors—of which approximately 900 have qualified to audit public
companies.
All audit firms must implement an internal quality control program following
IBRACON and CFC standards that fully comply with audit standards and CVM
rules (CVM 308, §32).
The CVM requires all registered auditors to be peer reviewed (CVM 308, §33).
The CRE administers the Brazilian peer review process for auditors (CVM 308,
§33; CFC Resolution 1323). Peer reviews must be conducted on a four-year cycle
(a three year cycle is planned). Each firm may choose the firm that will conduct
the peer review and negotiate the fee for the peer review. There is no prohibition
on the reviewing firm subsequently selecting the reviewed firm for its own peer
review. Peer reviews must be conducted in accordance with CFC and IBRACON
standards and prior notice has to be given to the CVM regarding the selection of
the reviewing auditor. The CVM may order the substitution of a reviewing auditor
if it considers the review performance to be not satisfactory (CVM 308, §33.5).
Reviewing auditors must issue a quality control review report to the reviewed
auditor, the CRE and the CVM by October 31 of the year of the review (CVM
308, §33.2). If weaknesses or deficiencies are identified, the reviewed firm must
prepare an action plan for correction and submit it to the CRE. The CRE will
analyze each review and approve the peer review report. Should the report contain
no opinion or an adverse opinion, a specific communication has to be forwarded to
the CFC and to the CVM.
There is a CVM office, composed exclusively of accountants, responsible for
registration and monitoring of auditors. The CVM performs inspections on a
periodic basis and on a ‘demand’ basis, (e.g., as a result of monitoring, whistle
59
blowing, financial statement analyses, etc). The office conducted 15 inspections in
2011, a significant increase from previous years (2009 -6, 2010 – 4). It relies on a
risk-based supervision model to select its periodic examinations.
Auditors must properly maintain all documents, work papers, reports, and reviews
for at least 5 years and make them available to the CVM (§25.3 and 25.5). The
five-year period may be extended if an administrative sanctioning proceeding
(“PAS”) is in progress. Through a PAS, the CVM may apply sanctions such as
warnings, fines, suspensions or registration withdrawals, regardless of other
applicable penalties, for failures to follow securities regulation and statutes,
perform inadequate audit services, or improperly use or allow the use of sensitive
information obtained as a result of the audit.
The CRE has its own disciplinary process for member firms but not individuals. It
may impose small monetary penalties or impose suspensions or terminate
registrations. Only significant CRE sanctions are made public.
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments Two key questions for this principle in the IOSCO Methodology warrant
comment:
3. Is there an oversight body that operates in the public interest, has an appropriate
membership, an adequate charter of responsibilities and powers, and adequate
funding, such that the oversight responsibilities are carried out in a manner
independent of the auditing profession?
4. Does the auditor oversight body have an established process for performing
regular reviews of audit procedures and practices of firms that audit financial
statements of public issuers?
A failure to satisfy question 3 results in a Not Implemented rating. A failure to
satisfy questions 4 results in a partly implemented rating, provided that 3 is
satisfied. The auditor oversight program of the CRE, by itself, would fail to satisfy
these key questions. The CFC and CRE are industry-controlled and funded
organizations that lack independent public members on their respective governing
boards. This lack of true independence is offset by the separate oversight program
by the CVM, which is an independent oversight body. Prior to 2011 the CVM
program was limited in scope. In 2011 it conducted 15 inspections of audit firms
that were selected through a risk-based selection methodology.
The peer review process is problematic. The ability of the reviewed firm to select
which firm will review it and to control the scope of the review through its control
over the amount that will be paid for the peer review is an important limitation of
the peer review process.
The adoption of a mandatory audit firm rotation requirement is noteworthy. It will
be interesting to see if this has a discernible and material impact on auditor
60
independence and audit quality.
Principle 20. Auditors should be independent of the issuing entity that they audit.
Description CVM Instruction 308 (§22) has a broad auditor independence requirement that
extends to anyone at the audit firm or anyone directly or indirectly controlled by
or controlling the firm or anyone belonging to the same economic group. Article
23 contains a broad list of prohibited non-audit services that, if performed, would
violate its independence requirement. The list in article 23 concludes with a broad
prohibition on “VII - any other product or service that influences or that may come
to influence the decisions taken by the administration of the institution audited”.
Audit firms must rotate their key partners and personnel at least every five years.
In addition, CVM Instruction 308 requires audit firm rotation (§31) every five
years, with an optional five-year extension for companies that have created an
audit committee (CVM 509/2011). In both cases, the cooling off period is three
years. The mandatory firm rotation applies to senior level staff, but junior staff
may transfer to the new firm.
As described in principle 17 the Corporation Law does not require issuers to have
a Board of Directors audit committee. In its place there is a Committee Fiscal (CF)
composed of persons selected by shareholder vote. Shareholders with 5% holdings
are entitled to select one member of the CF. The CF is not involved in the
selection or appointment process for the external auditor. The CF was created
primarily to provide some level of protection for minority shareholders. It is
required to publish its own report in the annual report.
The CF Turbinado (CFT) is a committee with slightly higher standards. At least
one member must be a “financial expert” and one member must be independent.
The CFT must meet six times a year and publish its own report to shareholders. It
also has no authority to hire or fire an auditor, but it may make a recommendation
to the Board. Creation of a CFT is optional.
The officials responsible for selection of an auditor may be liable if the auditor is
not independent (CVM 308, §27). Under article 28 of Instruction 308, managers of
audited entities must notify the CVM, within 20 days, of a change in company
auditor, including an explanation for the change and the consent of the substituted
auditor. If the audited entity does not comply with the deadline, the substituted
auditor must notify the CVM within 10 days and provide the reason for the
change.
Assessment Partly Implemented
Comments The IOSCO Methodology requires a Not Implemented rating if key question 6 is
not satisfied. Question 6.b.: From the perspective of public issuers: (b) Is there a
governance body independent in both fact and appearance of the management of
the entity (e.g., audit committee, board of corporate statutory auditors or other
body independent of the entity’s management) that oversees the process of
selection and appointment of the external auditor?
The CF does not play an oversight role in the selection and appointment of the
external auditor. The Board of Directors is not independent of management. The
61
recent innovation of the CFT may eventually provide an appropriately
independent overseer. However, at present, this is a voluntary option and it is not
clear how many, if any, companies have created one.
While the IOSCO Methodology directs that a not implemented rating be assigned
if Question 6.b. is not satisfied, there are other aspects of the Brazilian regulatory
system that partially offset this deficiency and warrant a higher rating of partly
implemented.
Principle 21. Audit standards should be of a high and internationally acceptable quality.
Description The CFC is the official standard setting body for the audit profession. The
Brazilian Institute of Accountants (IBRACON) issues auditing standards, and the
Federal Accounting Council (Conselho Federal de Contabilidade, or CFC)
approves them. CFC and IBRACON standards are based on international auditing
standards. The CFC through its resolutions (1201 to 1238/2009) has adopted all
International Auditing Standards (IAS). The CVM has supervisory authority to
review and approve audit standards.
As discussed previously, the CRE through its peer review program and the CVM
through its inspection program and review of peer review reports has the authority
to impose sanctions for failures to adhere to CFC audit standards.
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments Due to the complexity of the transition from traditional Brazilian audit standards
(largely based on U.S. GAAS), the CVM gave a one-year compliance extension to
small audit firms in Brazil. As the majority of listed companies in Brazil
(representing well over 90% of total market cap) are audited by a large firm, there
does not appear to have been a significant impact from this waiver.
Principle 22. Credit rating agencies should be subject to adequate levels of oversight. The
regulatory system should ensure that credit rating agencies whose ratings are used
for regulatory purposes are subject to registration and on-going supervision.
Description The three global credit rating agencies (Standard & Poor, Moodys, and Fitch)
perform credit rating services in Brazil. There are also three Brazilian credit rating
agencies that are active. As the Brazilian regulatory system did not extensively
embed a credit rating requirement in its regulatory policies, the credit rating
industry has a smaller level of influence than in many other countries. For
example, the BCB has not incorporated credit ratings into its capital adequacy
standards for financial institutions (which includes banks and broker-dealers). The
CVM has limited its reliance on credit ratings; primarily in areas such as certain
short-term debt mutual funds (such as the money market equivalent) and
securitized securities (FIDC and CRE).
§27 of the Capital Market Law (6.385/76) authorizes the CVM to “establish
regulations regarding the activities of securities analysts and consultants” and §11
of the law provides the CVM with broad enforcement powers for violations of any
provision of the law. In April 2012, following the FSAP mission, the CVM
adopted CVM Instruction 521, a comprehensive set of regulations for the
62
registration and oversight of credit rating agencies. As an English translation of
the instruction is not available, this description of the instruction is based upon a
revised self-assessment provided by the CVM.
§1 of CVM 521 provides a definition of credit ratings and §2 provides for CVM
registration of credit rating agencies domiciled in Brazil and a mutual recognition
process for foreign CRAs that are regulated by a qualified authority in the country
where it is domiciled and have a legal representative in Brazil. Annex 13 of
Instruction CVM521, requires CRAs to include in the Reference Form the
following information: (i) the identification of officers responsible for the form’s
content; (ii) the track record of the credit rating agency; (iii) human resources; (iv)
scope of activities; (v) economic group; (vi) operation and administrative
structure; (vii) rules, procedures, and internal controls; (viii) compensation; (ix)
conflict of interest; (x) procedures and methodologies of credit rating; (xi) updates
to the code of conduct; (xii) transition matrix of credit ratings; and (xiii) default
rate matrix. Under §12 of CVM521, the CRA must maintain a website with (i) the
Reference Form; (ii) the code of conduct; (iii) the rules, procedures, and internal
controls; and (iv) credit rating reports.
CVM 521 specifies the basis for cancellation of a CRA registration and the
sanctions available to the CVM for violations of the instruction. §29 of CVM521
requires CRAs to adopt and apply rating methodologies and procedures that must
be reviewed at least annually. §30 requires CRAs to immediately disclose the
potential impact on issued credit ratings of any significant changes in its
methodologies and procedures.
§20 requires a CRA code of conduct consistent with the IOSCO Code of Conduct
for CRAs. The CRA must also adopt mechanisms to identify, eliminate, manage
and disclose situations involving conflicts of interest, and a policy related to
securities trading by the credit rating analysts and by others involved in the credit
rating process. The Code must also address analyst compensation policies and
segregation of business and rating functions.
Under §16 of CVM521 CRAs must provide in the Reference Form sections (iii)
information on human resources and (viii) compensation and in individual credit
rating reports the following information: (1) the qualification of the credit rating
analyst responsible for the elaboration of the report and the person responsible for
approval of the rating assigned, or the members of the credit rating committee; and
(2) the characteristics and any limitations in the rating assigned, with regard to the
extent, quality and accuracy of the existing documents and historical data.
§31 of CVM521 requires the CRA to disclose its ratings performance track record
since 2002, per segment, disclosing the initial credit ratings, their changes and the
probability of transition, for each rating, within a term of one and three years
(credit rating transition matrix); and the probability of an issuer, a structured
operation, a financial obligation or any other rated financial asset with a specific
rating default within one and three years (default rate matrix). If the credit rating
agency is part of a group with operations in other jurisdictions, it should also
submit the matrices with the global market information.
63
Under §25 and 28 of CVM521, the CRA must have controls over the confidential
information which its managers, employers and advisors have access to, and must
ensure complete segregation of the credit rating activities and the other activities
performed by the agency or by related third party, adopting operational procedures
aiming the preservation of confidential information by all the people involved in
the issuing of credit ratings and restricted access to files, as well as the adoption of
controls which restrict and allow for the identification of people who have access
to confidential information.
Assessment Broadly Implemented
Comments As previously noted, the CVM regulation on CRAs was adopted in April 2012,
after completion of the FSAP mission. Based upon the information provided by
the CVM it appears to address substantially all of the key questions in the IOSCO
methodology. Because it is a new regulation, it is difficult to offer an assessment
on how the regulation will be implemented and enforced. For this reason, it is not
possible to give a fully implemented rating.
Given that the CVM has historically not relied heavily on credit ratings for
regulatory purposes, it is unlikely that Brazil has a significant risk of having the
regulatory problems experienced in other countries.
Principle 23. Other entities that offer investors analytical or evaluative services should be
subject to oversight and regulation appropriate to the impact their activities have
on the market or the degree to which the regulatory system relies on them.
Description The CVM has a formal licensing and regulatory system for market analysts and
market consultants. Autonomous agents, which are similar to introducing brokers
in the U.S. and may be individuals or entities, also are licensed and regulated by
CVM, and indirectly by BSM. None of these persons or entities is permitted to
have control over investor/client funds and assets or exercise discretionary
investment authority. The role played by unofficial SROs in the qualification
process for these categories of entities is discussed in principle 9.
The CVM inspection program inspects a sample of each of these types of entities.
It devotes special attention to autonomous agents because they play a significant
role in the retail brokerage sector.
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments
Principles for Collective Investment Schemes
Principle 24. The regulatory system should set standards for the eligibility, governance,
organization and operational conduct of those who wish to market or operate a
collective investment scheme.
Description Under the Securities Law (6.385/76, §15) only authorized financial institutions of
the “Brazilian Distribution System” registered with the CVM (Instruction 306/99)
may offer CIS shares. All investment funds (including Real Estate, Private Equity,
Venture Capital and Hedge Funds) must be registered with the CVM. There is a fit
and proper requirement for the responsible director of the CIS management firm
64
and the firm must demonstrate that it has adequate infrastructure and technical
resources (CVM Instruction 306/99, §7, III and §8, V). Although there is no
minimum capital requirement for the CIS management firm, each CIS must
maintain a minimum capital of 300,000 BR (Instruction 409, §105). Firms must
have an internal control and risk management process (CVM Instruction 306,
§14). The CVM evaluates the fund management firm’s capabilities as part of its
licensing application process. No on-site inspection is conducted during the
application review. However the CVM (and Anbima) conduct routine on-site
inspections of licensed firms. The CVM selects the firms to inspect using its risk-
based supervision methodology (discussed in principle 12). The CVM has full
authority to conduct investigations and to sanction violations of its laws and
regulations.
The CVM requires calculation and daily disclosure of a fund’s net asset value, and
monthly disclosure of the full fund portfolio (certain holdings that are being
acquired or disposed may be kept confidential for a short period of time). The
CVM also requires funds to disclose other information periodically or
immediately if it is deemed material to investors (CVM Instruction 409 §72). An
annual audited financial statement must be provided prior to the annual
shareholders meeting (CVM Instruction 409/04, art. 84 and 49 §1). The fund
administrator is responsible for maintaining all books and records for five years.
The CVM also governs which fund expenses may be recovered directly from fund
assets(409 §99). Each fund must disclose a single comprehensive fee covering
both administration and portfolio management. Multi-market funds may also
charge an additional performance-based fee if it is fully disclosed. The CVM does
not have rules governing the maximum amount of fees.
The CIS Fund manager must be accredited with the CVM as a portfolio manager
firm (CVM Instruction 409/04, art. 3). The fund administrator and fund portfolio
manager may be the same company or they may be separate entities. The CVM
has the same registration process for both applicants. CVM requires at least one
individual at each entity to have three-year direct experience and 5 years in related
areas.
Fund administrators typically are members of Anbima, the industry trade
organization. While membership is voluntary, virtually the entire fund industry is
a member. In Brazil the fund industry is heavily concentrated, with 10 companies
(primarily banks or bank subsidiaries) controlling over 90% of all assets. Anbima
is not officially recognized as an industry self-regulatory organization but
performs virtually all of the duties of an SRO. Anbima members must meet its
qualifications and agree to comply with a series of 11 industry codes of conduct
65
(best practices). Anbima has a supervision program that monitors compliance and
conducts inspections. It also has, by membership agreement, the authority to
sanction member firms (but not individual employees).
All CIS in Brazil are created as a condominium. This is a legal entity that
represents the collective fund investors. It does not have a Board of Directors and
there is no limited liability (discussed in principle 25). Investor protection is
provided through periodic disclosure requirements (principle 26) and an annual
shareholders meeting. Any changes in fees, by-laws or other matters that adversely
affects investors must be approved by a majority vote at the annual meeting.
The fund management firm and the fund portfolio manager are subject to a
fiduciary duty to act in the interests of the fund’s investors (CVM Instruction 409
§65A and Instruction 306 §14-II). The CVM believes that the general requirement
to act in the investor’s best interest imposes due diligence and best execution
obligations on CIS (CVM 306 §14-II and 409 § 65-A). Other requirements such as
the allocation of trades between funds (CVM 409 §60) and churning (306 §16-VI,
and 409 §60) are specifically addressed.
The CVM has adopted several rules designed to minimize conflicts of interest
between investors and CIS managers or administrators. For example the managing
director of a CIS operator may not have other responsibilities whether inside or
outside the company (306 §7.5 and 6). CIS must have mandatory segregation of
activities (Chinese wall). The CIS must have a secrecy and training policy. The
CIS must have a policy governing securities trading by CIS employees (306 §15-
V). Any benefits obtained belong to the fund itself (406 §65-A). Finally,
Instruction 306 (§14-IIIc) requires mandatory disclosure of any other conflicts of
interest not specifically listed in the regulation.
The CVM has a general prohibition on related party transactions unless there is
prior written consent (CVM 306 §16). Typically CIS obtain broad consent to
engage in related party transactions through generic disclosure in fund
prospectuses. In 2011 the CVM issued Instruction 514, which will require funds to
provide disclosure of related party transactions. The Instruction is not in effect as
of the date of this assessment.
Given the high level of industry concentration, it is not surprising that industry fee
levels are high, especially for short-term income funds (akin to money market
funds). The CVM is aware of this issue and is considering inclusion of a fee table
in the prospectus that would better disclose the impact of different fees.
Brazil does not permit the offer and sale of foreign CIS in Brazil, unless the
66
company is domiciled in Brazil and registered with CVM. Brazilian CIS that
invest abroad must have custody arrangements with a custodian accredited with
the appropriate foreign regulator, who must be a signatory to a bilateral MOU with
the CVM or a full signatory of the IOSCO MMOU (Instruction 409, §2.5 and
§2.6).
The fund administrator may subcontract with third parties to perform
administrative services. The administrator retains liability for contractor
misconduct (409 §57). A change in the portfolio manager, administrator or
custodian requires a vote of investors at the annual meeting (409 §47-II). All
delegations to third parties must be disclosed to the CVM (409, §65-VII) and to
investors (§57.2). All key subcontractors (e.g. fund managers, custodians,
auditors, consultants and registrars) are registered with the CVM and may be
subject to enforcement action.
In Brazil, securities that are issued based upon ownership of an undivided share of
a portfolio of assets, commonly known as asset-backed securities (ABS), are
regulated as investment funds. They have the same legal identity – condominium
and are regulated by the CVM office responsible for mutual fund oversight. They
are not required to adhere to all mutual fund requirements. The most common
form is a real estate ABS called a Fundo de Investimento em Direitos Creditorios
(“FIDC”). These operate similarly to a closed-end mutual fund. Some FIDC may
have static asset pools and some may have pools that change over time. FIDC
asset pools must be held by a CVM licensed custodian. The FIDC asset manager is
not required to have a CVM license. Unlike mutual funds an FIDC may issue, and
typically does issue, more than one class of security with different preferences.
The originator of the fund must retain an equity interest in the fund. Previously it
was 20% but as of 2012 it may be 5%. These securities are registered at CETIP
and may be traded OTC with trades reported to CETIP, although the market is
illiquid.
A monthly asset valuation report must be filed with BCB and is publicly available.
Assessment Broadly Implemented
Comments The broadly implemented assessment is based on CVM responses to 4 questions
in the IOSCO Methodology.
Question 2(e) pertains to the existence of adequate risk management systems at
the fund. There is no specific requirement that funds must have risk management
systems. In its self-assessment (as revised), the CVM explains that §14-II of
Instruction 306 imposes a general obligation to act with due care and diligence.
While a duty of care and diligence is an important regulatory principle, it does not
by itself satisfy the need for adequate risk management systems.
Question 4 concerns governance systems designed to ensure that funds are owned
and operated in the best interests of investors. The CVM self-assessment explains
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that this is addressed by requiring full and timely disclosure to fund participants
and a statutory requirement that all material decisions must be voted on by
investors at an annual shareholder meeting. While disclosure is an essential
component of any system to protect investors, a system based only on an annual
meeting of investors is limited in its capacity to provide effective governance
oversight.
Question 6(d) concerns the regulators’ clear responsibilities and powers to take
remedial action in the event of breaches or defaults. In its self-assessment the
CVM describes its general enforcement powers to sanction through warnings,
fines, or revocation of licenses, as well as its capacity to enter into a negotiated
consent settlement. These sanctions may not provide prompt remedial action.
Question 14(d) pertains to whether the regulatory system addresses issues
concerning related party transactions. The financial sector of Brazil is heavily
concentrated and funds routinely purchase or sell or invest in securities of a parent
or related party. Banks rely heavily on mutual funds for funding through repo
transactions and investments in bank deposit or CDs. High reserve requirements
create incentives for banking groups to establish mutual funds and secure funding
sources through them. Combined repo and bank deposit/CD are approximately 34
percent of total mutual fund assets. The single exposure limit for mutual funds (up
to 20 percent of NAV) excludes repo transactions. Because banks are able to
engage in a reverse repo with the BCB, at a slightly higher rate, the financial
transactions between mutual funds and the parent bank can be an integral
component of the bank’s business model. Because of this combination of factors,
related party transactions present a significant regulatory challenge in Brazil.
While there is a “Chinese wall” regulation, under which fund managers should be
independent of the interests of the rest of the group there is a risk that during a
stress period, managers may have incentives to transfer liquidity across a group.
Also, banks may encourage clients to hold their shares in their affiliated mutual
funds to ensure adequate funding to the conglomerate. Because the majority of
mutual fund assets are invested by institutional or corporate investors, who are
more sensitive to changes in market conditions, there is a risk of substantial
withdrawals during periods of market turmoil. In case of large outflows under
market turbulence, mutual funds may be forced to unwind repo loans and redeem
liquid bank CDs. There are no regulatory limitations on related party transactions
so long as the practice is disclosed by the fund in its prospectus and in its by-laws.
The CVM inspection process examines fund related party transaction records.
The broadly implemented assessment also reflects the reliance on the annual
meeting to provide effective governance to protect investors.
The IOSCO Methodology recommends that a failure to address questions 2(e), 4
and 6(d) warrants a not implemented rating. An inability to address questions
14(d) warrants a partly implemented rating. Based upon the totality of the
regulatory system in Brazil, it appears that a broadly implemented rating is
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appropriate.
Principle 25. The regulatory system should provide for rules governing the legal form and
structure of collective investment schemes and the segregation and protection of
client assets.
Description All CIS in Brazil are created as a condominium. This is a legal entity that
represents the collective fund investors. Applications to the CVM must contain a
copy of the official registration documents, by-laws and contracts with third
parties, such as custodians or third party portfolio managers. A CIS may have only
one share class. It does not have a Board of Directors and there is no limited
liability. Investors in the fund may be liable personally to the extent that fund
assets are insufficient. This is a possibility if a fund invests in options or futures
that have open-ended exposure or if there is fraudulent conduct by the
management. While the fund investors would presumably have recourse against
the fund administrator or manager, this would not eliminate personal liability in
the event that the culpable administrator or manager is insolvent. This liability is
discussed in CVM instruction 409 §30, which requires disclosure to investors of
the possibility of a required additional investment in the event that the fund has a
negative net worth.
Investor protection is largely based on an annual shareholders meeting. Any
changes in fees, by-laws or other matters that adversely affects investors must be
approved by a majority vote at the annual meeting. The fund’s prospectus and by-
laws must fully disclose all investor rights and obligations.
The CVM requires all funds to have a custodian that must be a financial institution
also registered at CVM to perform such activities. The fund must have a
segregated account at the custodian in the name of the Fund (CVM 409 §2.8). The
CVM states that this segregated account in the Fund’s name is protected in the
event of a failure or bankruptcy by the fund administrator or custodian.
A Fund may be liquidated for two reasons. If its average total assets are less than
300,000 BR for a 90-day period, the CVM requires liquidation of the fund (CVM
409 §105). The second reason is a vote of the investors at an annual or special
meeting. If a fund administrator suspends fund redemption it must schedule a
special shareholder meeting within 15 days. At the meeting the investors may vote
to change administrators or to liquidate the fund.
The CVM has full authority to investigate any infractions by a fund administrator
or manager and to take administrative enforcement action (see principle 11).
Anbima has similar powers over member firms (almost all funds in Brazil)
Assessment Partly Implemented
Comments The IOSCO Methodology requires a not implemented rating if key question 9 is
not satisfied: Does the regulatory system adequately provide for an orderly
winding up of CIS business, if needed?
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In Brazil the fund manager controls the winding up process and the fund manager
must call for a shareholder’s general meeting within 15 days to authorize the
winding down. This process may be satisfactory in the event that the manager of a
solvent and liquid fund decides that a winding up of the fund is appropriate.
However, a process that requires a shareholders meeting in 15 days may not
produce an orderly winding up if the circumstances involve issues of solvency or
liquidity or misconduct. This is potentially a serious risk in a period of market
instability. The CVM believes that it has the legal authority to adopt a regulation
that would create a process for the CVM to take a greater role in the process but it
has not adopted a regulation that provides for the CVM to direct a winding down
or to supervise the process. Accordingly the current process does not satisfy the
“orderly winding up” requirement. While the Methodology states that the lack of
an orderly winding up process is a basis for a Not implemented rating, as a matter
of discretion, a partly implemented assessment has been chosen because the
process is orderly in some circumstances.
While it does not affect the rating under this Principle, the legal structure that
allows investors to have unlimited liability on a failure of a fund raises some
concerns and may require legislation to remedy. The potential unlimited liability
of mutual fund investors is a serious issue for the future of the mutual fund
industry in Brazil. Although unlikely given trading rules (e.g., margin calls),
imagine what would happen in Brazil if a small obscure multi-mercado fund took
an excessive risk by investing substantial amounts of assets in the DI futures
market and guessed wrong. Potentially this could result in losses that exceed the
total value of the fund. If the fund manager lacked the “deep pocket” to pay the
losses, it could result in a negative net asset value and an obligation by fund
investors, who had already lost their entire investment, to pay the debt. Such an
event could cause a national panic by all mutual fund investors.
Principle 26. Regulation should require disclosure, as set forth under the principles for issuers,
which is necessary to evaluate the suitability of a collective investment scheme for
a particular investor and the value of the investor’s interest in the scheme.
Description The CVM requires each fund to provide potential investors with a Fund Brochure
(prospectus) reviewed by the CVM that “contain all information relevant to the
investor related to the fund’s investment policy and the risks involved” (CVM 409
§39). Changes in the Brochure must be filed with the CVM within one day. The
Brochure “shall contain, in clear and accessible language to the fund target public,
information regarding the following topics, as well as any other information
considered relevant” (CVM 409 §40):
I – management targets as well as fund objectives and target public;
II – investment policy and range of assets allocation, the analysis and selection
process;
III – list fund service providers;
IV– clear specification of fund taxes and other expenses;
V – detailed presentation of the administrator and manager, with information
about their registration in the CVM, their technical departments and other
resources and services used to manage the fund;
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VI – the minimum and maximum limits of investment, and limits on holding or
redemption;
VII – conditions for quotas redemption and grace period;
VIII – policy on distribution of gains, including terms and payment conditions;
IX – identification of fund risks;
X – information about risk management methods and policies;
XI – information on applicable taxes and the tax treatment policy to be followed;
XII – policy related to the exercise of the voting right of the companies in which
the fund holds an investment;
XIII – policy of information disclosure, including the information related to
portfolio composition, which shall be identical to all who request it;
XIV –identification of the fund’s risk classification agency, whenever there is one,
as well as the obtained classification;
XV – the place, means and form of obtaining the fund results in previous years, as
well as other information regarding previous years, such as accounting statements,
fund administrator’s reports and other pertinent documents; and
XVI – the maximum percentage of quotas one sole quota holder can retain.
The CVM classifies mutual funds into seven categories:
I – Short Term Fund; II – Referenced Fund; III – Fixed Income Fund; IV – Stocks
Fund; V – Exchange Fund; VI – External debt Fund; and VII – Multimarket Fund.
The CVM has a limited number of prudential investment restrictions that apply to
each fund type and several that are general in application. For example funds may
not have more than 20% of the portfolio invested in securities from a single
financial institution or 10% from any other issuer. There are no limits on
counterparty trading concentration. Funds may deviate from this restriction if
permitted in its by-laws. Funds may not borrow money, but if disclosed, it may
invest in derivatives and engage in short selling. Short-term funds (money-market
funds) may invest in securities with terms of less than 375 days, and securities
must be rated “low risk” by a credit rating agency. The multi-market fund is
considered the equivalent of a hedge fund. It may invest in virtually any security
and may deviate from concentration limits. These funds may have a performance-
based fee structure. Funds of funds must retain a 5% liquidity cushion.
CVM regulations do not require funds to provide investors with periodic or annual
reports. Investors must receive a monthly account statement of holdings and value
(CVM409 §72). Funds must report monthly (10 days after month end) the entire
portfolio of assets in the fund (with some exceptions, for 30 -90 days, for
confidential acquisition or selling strategies). These reports are publicly available.
Also, the CVM, shareholders, and the market must be immediately informed about
“any act or fact that could reasonably affect the value of the shares or affect
investor’s opinion on buying, selling or keeping those shares” (CVM 409 §72).
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Funds must provide investors on request a copy of an audited annual financial
statement within 90 days after the CIS corporate year (CVM 409 §82). The
accounting standards applicable to CIS are set by the CVM (Instruction 438
Investment Fund Chart of Accounts – COFI). The CVM reports that they are
compliant with international standards (IFRS).
The CVM has broad authority to order funds to correct misstatements in public
documents and to impose sanctions for any misstatements. This also applies to
non-prospectus disclosures contained in advertising or sales materials. While the
CVM does not review sales material, Anbima pre-reviews all advertising and sales
material and can require a member firm to revise or correct statements in the
materials. The CVM also has the authority to halt an offering of fund shares if
necessary (Law 6.385/76 §13).
The CVM is considering two significant changes in its disclosure policy. One
change would amend CVM instruction 306 and require funds to disclose the
valuation methodology used to calculate NAV. Another change would create a
“summary prospectus”, a short form easy to understand prospectus that would also
provide improved disclosure of fees.
Assessment Broadly Implemented
Comments This rating is based on the inability to satisfy two key questions:
5. Does the regulatory system specifically require that the offering documents, or
other publicly available information, include the following: … (e) Information on
the methodology of asset valuation? 9. Does the regulatory system require a report to be prepared in respect of a CIS’s
activities either on an annual, semi-annual or other periodic basis?
The lack of an annual or periodic report to investors is a serious limitation. The
lack of disclosure of the fund’s methodology for calculating NAV is also a
deficiency. A strict application of the IOSCO Methodology would require a not
implemented rating. A broadly implemented assessment has been chosen instead
as there are some offsetting protections such as the requirement that funds disclose
monthly its full portfolio holdings, the material events disclosure requirement and
the requirement to provide an annual audited financial statement on request.
Reliance on Anbima to review mutual fund advertising materials is less than ideal,
as Anbima is not a regulated SRO. While this is not the basis for the broadly
implemented rating, it is suggested that the CVM consider expanding its role in
oversight of advertising materials.
Principle 27. Regulation should ensure that there is a proper and disclosed basis for asset
valuation and the pricing and the redemption of units in a collective investment
scheme.
Description All funds must price portfolio assets and calculate NAV on a daily basis (CVM
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409 §68 and 71). The fund portfolio valuation must be independently audited on
an annual basis (CVM 409, §84). Asset valuations must be in accordance with
CVM -COFI accounting standards. According to item 1.2.1.3 of COFI, when there
is no verifiable market value to a particular asset, alternative methods of valuation
may be used, such as:
(i) the value of another asset that has similar rate, risk and duration;
(ii) present discounted cash flow, based on actual interest rates; or
(iii) mathematical-statistic pricing models.
Anbima, Bovespa and CETIP provide debt-pricing vectors that are generally used
by funds to value debt securities.
Anbima staff review all fund NAV on a daily basis to identify price fluctuations or
deviations from funds in the same segment. Whenever a pricing anomaly is
identified, the fund is contacted and an explanation is requested.
As part of their on-site inspections of funds, CVM and Anbima review a sample of
fund’s NAV calculations and any occasions when alternative pricing methods
were used.
Under CVM rules the fund administrator is responsible for damages to investors
caused by noncompliance with CVM rules. The CVM believes that an error in
NAV calculation that damaged an investor would be covered by this provision
(CVM 409 §2 and 3).
The process for purchasing or redeeming shares in a fund must be specified in the
fund’s bylaws (CVM 409 §15) and may only be changed by a vote of the investors
at a general meeting. Funds may include redemption limitations in its by-laws as
well. These must be disclosed in the Fund prospectus. Upon redemption, the fund
has five days to process the payment transaction.
A fund may suspend purchases and redemptions if it is unable to calculate NAV
(CVM 409 §16.2). As discussed in principle 26, whenever this occurs the fund
must notify the CVM and its investors within one day and call for a special
shareholder meeting within 15 days. Decisions to suspend redemption of
purchases or redemptions may only be made by the fund administrator and
because of a determination that it is not possible to calculate NAV.
The CVM believes that it could order a suspension in purchase or redemption of a
specific mutual fund under §9.1I of the Securities Act. This provision states “In
order to prevent or correct abnormal market situations, the Securities Commission
of Brazil may: I - suspend trading of securities or declare the recess of a stock
exchange”. The same section of the Securities Act also empowers the CVM to
“prohibit market participants, under penalty of fine, from performing any activities
it may specify, which it considers to be harmful to normal market functioning.”
The CVM interpretation of these provisions has never been tested.
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments Decisions to suspend redemption of purchases or redemptions may only be made
by the fund administrator and because of a determination that it is not possible to
calculate NAV. As described above, the CVM believes that it could order a
suspension in purchase or redemption of a specific mutual fund under §9.1I of the
Securities Act. The CVM interpretation has never been tested and at best it may
not encompass all possible scenarios when a temporary suspension is in the
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interest of fund investors. Although not required under the Assessment
Methodology, the CVM is encouraged to consider adopting an Instruction
articulating the circumstances when it would take action if an operator suspends
redemption or declines to suspend redemptions in emergencies when the
protection of investors warrants CVM action and it is not possible to schedule and
hold a shareholders meeting in time.
Principle 28. Regulation should ensure that hedge funds and/or hedge funds managers/advisers
are subject to appropriate oversight.
Description In Brazil hedge funds are classified as multi market mutual funds and are subject
to the same regulatory structure as other mutual funds. Accordingly the CVM
licenses fund administrators, portfolio managers and the fund itself. Hedge funds
must adhere to the same monthly portfolio disclosure, record-keeping, internal
control, conflict of interest and asset valuation and daily pricing rules as described
above for mutual funds.
Also hedge funds are subject to the same prohibition on borrowing that applies to
all mutual funds. Leverage is only possible through the use of derivatives.
The CVM also has adopted a separate registration and regulatory scheme for
venture capital and private equity funds. These are a growing segment of the
Brazilian institutional investment sector.
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments Because investors in hedge funds include pension funds and the general public
consideration should be given to increased oversight of investment portfolios for
systemic risk purposes.
Principles for Market Intermediaries
Principle 29. Regulation should provide for minimum entry standards for market intermediaries.
Description In Brazil the responsibility for licensing financial intermediaries is shared by BCB
and the CVM. Because broker-dealers are included in the BCB definition of
financial institution, BCB has primary licensing responsibility, as well as capital
and prudential regulation, discussed in principle 30.
The BCB licensing process is the same for banks and market intermediaries. It
requires firms to submit an application that identifies the controlling persons, their
relevant experience and qualifications, other information needed to make a fit and
proper assessment. The BCB does not have specific criteria other than requiring a
relevant university degree and some level of relevant experience. Applicants must
submit a business plan and must demonstrate that the applicant has the necessary
resources to operate. There is an initial capital requirement of 350,000 BR for a
firm that will have no more than ten branch offices. If the firm plans on engaging
in repo transactions the minimum capital requirement is 1.5 million BR.
Unless BCB conditions the license, a firm may engage in all forms of financial
intermediation in equities, debt, futures and derivatives, forex, mutual funds, and
securities underwriting. BCB also issues licenses for forex brokerage only. When
74
a bank creates a broker subsidiary, it may operate as a legal subsidiary or as an
undifferentiated component of the bank conglomerate. Bank employees who
provide securities intermediary services to customers must pass an Anbima
examination. The CVM also licenses these firms in conjunction with its
responsibilities for investor protection and supervision of market conduct. It also
has exclusive responsibility for licensing and/or regulating several other types of
market intermediaries. Market analysts provide investment recommendations.
They must pass a qualifying exam administered by Apimec, which issues a
license. Market consultants can provide advice to investors but not have control
over investor assets or accounts. They are licensed directly by CVM. In lieu of an
examination they must have a relevant university degree and relevant work
experience. Independent agents are broker-dealer sales personnel who are not
employees of a licensed financial intermediary, but function under a contractual
agreement. They are licensed by the CVM after passing an examination
administered by ANCORD. Autonomous agents are a hybrid of an investment
advisor and an introducing broker that uses the licensed firm to process
transactions and provide administrative support. Autonomous agents cannot have
custody or investment control of client assets. These responsibilities require an
asset manager license (discussed in principle 24). The CVM also licenses transfer
agents and custodians, which must also be financial institutions registered with
BCB. CVM requires applicants for these licenses to submit a certification by an
independent auditor that they have adequate financial resources. The CVM also
has a separate license for intermediaries who function exclusively in the
commodity futures sector.
The CVM posts all approved applications on its website. The application includes
the name of the officer in charge of the firm. Firms must provide updated
information if there is a change in the name of the responsible executive. The
CVM website also includes information on any “autonomous agents” with which
the firm has a contractual agreement. CVM instruction 402 provides that any
CVM license may be revoked immediately if a registrant no longer meets its
requirements. CVM and BCB both have the authority to suspend or impose
limitations on a license or on a person employed by the licensed intermediary.
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments The CVM and BCB rely upon qualification exams administered by Anbima,
Apimec and ANCORD. None of these organizations is an official self-regulatory
organization subject to direct oversight by the CVM. This issue is discussed in
principle 9.
The BCB requirements for professional experience and relevant credentials are
general. It would be beneficial to require expertise and experience that is specific
to the business of a broker-dealer.
Principle 30. There should be initial and ongoing capital and other prudential requirements for
market intermediaries that reflect the risks that the intermediaries undertake.
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Description Under BCB resolution 3,490 (August 29, 2007) financial institutions and other
institutions licensed by the BCB are required to allocate capital according to the
risk of their activities on a permanent basis. There are no specific quantitative
liquidity standards. As described in principle 29, BCB requires applicants to have
a minimum of 350,000 BR in initial capital. After a firm is licensed and in
operation the BCB requires it to submit a daily risk-weighted capital report. The
report is prepared by applying BCB risk weighting parameters to the firm’s assets
and liabilities using a value at risk (VaR) model developed by the BCB. The BCB
provides all institutions with the risk weighting parameters on a daily basis. As a
general matter, the BCB requires all financial institutions to maintain a minimum
11% capital level. In addition to the daily calculation the BCB requires a detailed
monthly report. Non-bank financial institutions with less than 100 million BR in
assets are required to file this report quarterly. Non-bank institutions must also
provide information on client accounts. The BCB estimates that 2/3 of broker-
dealer type nonbank financial institutions file quarterly. The BCB doesn’t require
any other types of reports from intermediaries. The CVM doesn’t require regular
reports other than those pertaining to internal control compliance.
BCB conducts continuous on-site and off-site monitoring of licensed institutions
to identify any deterioration of capital adequacy that could affect the continuity of
the financial institution or the stability of financial markets. In Brazil, virtually
every financial instrument is registered. This enables the BCB supervisory staff to
access all transactional information specific to any financial institution with a one-
day lag. The BCB can monitor transaction based detail as well as reconstruct
various bank positions, such as liquidity positions, funds provider information, and
market risk exposures. When appropriate the BCB can stress test positions and
monitor extraordinary trends.
The large broker-dealer/intermediaries that are subsidiaries of bank conglomerates
do not report separately. Instead the BCB requires a consolidated financial report
for the entire conglomerate. According to Resolution 3,444 the regulatory capital
requirements must be assessed on a consolidated basis for institutions belonging to
both a financial conglomerate (including financial institutions and other
institutions licensed by the BCB controlled by banks) and an economic
conglomerate (including financial institutions, other institutions licensed by the
BCB and other non-financial entities controlled by banks).
The BCB has powers to establish prudential preventive measures in order to
address such situations. In case of deterioration in the capital adequacy position,
below the minimum, the supervisor must be notified within one day. BCB may, at
its discretion, determine a reduction in the level of risk or an increase in capital
requirements (Resolution 3,490/2007). In more severe cases, the Supervision staff
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can summon the managers and the majority shareholders of the financial
institution by issuing an “attendance order”. The objective is to discuss the
problems and possible solutions to be applied and also define a deadline for the
institution to present a correction plan. This plan and its timeline must be
approved and followed-up by BCB. When carrying out its duties, the Supervision
staff may address itself directly to any department or employee of the financial
institution (Law 4,595/1964).
The BCB has adopted several Resolutions addressing risk management. These
include Resolution 3,380, of June 29, 2006, for operational risk; Resolution 3,464,
of June 26, 2007, for market risk; Resolution 3,721, of April 30, 2009, for credit
risk.
Investment advisers, including autonomous agents are not permitted to hold or
control client funds and assets. Accordingly they are not regulated by BCB and the
CVM does not have capital standards for these entities.
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments Large bank conglomerates dominate the Brazilian financial system. The large
broker-dealers are in most cases subsidiaries of these banks. Under the BCB
system, the bank has full liability for the obligations of the subsidiary. In this
environment, a capital adequacy standard that is based on banking operations is
understandable.
However, in most jurisdictions the capital adequacy standards for banks are
typically very different than the standards for financial intermediaries, reflecting
the fundamentally different businesses and the difference between bank customers
whose deposits appear on a bank’s financial statements and brokerage customers
with accounts that do not appear on a financial statement. Given the rapid changes
that can occur in capital markets, regulatory principles emphasize the need for
frequent analysis of firm liquidity and regular reporting of detailed information on
open positions. In Brazil, detailed reporting on a quarterly basis by smaller non-
bank financial institutions may create the possibility of unreported and undetected
liquidity and solvency risks for these smaller entities; particularly since 100
million BR does not seem to be a meaningful threshold to define smaller broker-
dealers. It is suggested that the BCB consider whether its bank VaR model is
optimal for nonbank financial intermediaries. These concerns are mitigated
substantially by the capacity of the BCB to monitor virtually all transactions and
open positions by regulated firms on a one day delay.
Principle 31. Market intermediaries should be required to establish an internal function that
delivers compliance with standards for internal organization and operational
conduct, with the aim of protecting the interests of clients and their assets and
ensuring proper management of risk, through which management of the
intermediary accepts primary responsibility for these matters.
Description CVM Instruction 387 requires intermediaries to have an internal control program
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to monitor firm compliance with CVM requirements. In 2011 CVM adopted a new
more expansive instruction on firm internal compliance. Instruction 505
(compliance by October 2012) requires intermediaries to have appropriate rules,
procedures and internal controls. Firms must designate one manager responsible
for implementing the procedures and internal controls. A second official must be
assigned responsibility for reviewing compliance. At least two times a year, the
executive in charge of oversight must report to the board on compliance (CVM
505, §4). All internal control records must be maintained for five years. Instruction
505 also requires firms to record all conversations with clients involving trade
instructions. In addition to this internal evaluation, BSM (Bovespa’s SRO unit)
performs external audits of firm internal controls at least once a year. The results
of this external review are discussed with senior management of the market
intermediary and reported to CVM.
Bovespa permits member firms to provide direct electronic access, provided it is
processed by the firm’s electronic order processing systems, with the member firm
responsible for the order. All Bovespa requirements on position and credit must be
followed. Bovespa trading systems require all orders to identify the client account
(access limited to Bovespa and CVM). CVM requires all firms to have a licensed
custodian (it may be an affiliate of the broker) that maintains separate client
custody accounts.
CVM instructions require firms to have written agreements, provide account
statements and apply “know your customer” standards. Firms have a legal duty to
act in the best interests of clients, ahead of firm interests. All firms must have
procedures to prevent conflicts of interest and monitor compliance internally. All
client securities are dematerialized at the Bovespa central depository in individual
accounts.
Bovespa maintains a customer protection fund (MCR) to recompense customer
losses due to intermediary misconduct or insolvency. The maximum recovery is
70,000 BR. This fund only covers damages involving securities listed for trading
on the Bovespa.
While CVM has broad authority to regulate business conduct and promote
investor protection, its authority does not cover the purchase or sale of government
debt securities. BCB has sole responsibility for regulation pertaining to
government securities. There is no protection fund for losses involving
government securities and BCB cannot use its enforcement actions to recompense
investors for losses.
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments BCB is primarily a prudential regulator and CVM is primarily an investor
protection regulator. The assignment of investor protection responsibilities
pertaining to government securities to BCB is not optimal. The CVM should have
authority to protect investors from fraudulent sales practices by market
intermediaries involving government securities.
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Principle 32. There should be a procedure for dealing with the failure of a market intermediary
in order to minimize damage and loss to investors and to contain systemic risk.
Description The BCB is the prudential regulator for all financial institutions in Brazil and has
exclusive responsibility for dealing with the failure of a market intermediary. The
BCB has the authority to take preventive and corrective action when banks violate
its regulations or in the event of operating weakness. The BCB can restrict
operations, require additional capital, require plans to correct deficiencies and in
critical situations, intervention, removal of management, liquidation and/or the
imposition of fines. The BCB can also order emergency preventive prudential
measures in order to preserve the soundness, the stability and the regular
functioning of the financial system. It can also act to prevent the deterioration of a
financial institution, even if it is still compliant with operational limits, including
capital requirements.
As noted in principal 31, BCB Resolution 4019 requires firm managers to notify it
of any situation posing a material risk to a financial institution. BCB may order
firms to take corrective measures, including restrictions on operations and
activities. In the event of a failure by an intermediary, the BCB may act
“extrajudicially” and appoint a temporary receiver to take control of the financial
institution. While the BCB lacks the authority to order firms to transfer client
accounts, the BCB can appoint a receiver to take control of a firm. This receiver
may require the distribution of client funds and securities or the transfer of
accounts to another firm. If a BCB action on resolution is appealed to the Brazilian
judicial system, the Court has the power to suspend the transaction pending
appeal.
As previously described in principle 30, the BCB has access, on a one-day delay
basis, to virtually every financial transaction and open position. Some of the
systems developed by the BCB’s Monitoring Department are: monitoring of
outliers (trading prices and day trade chains); market risk monitoring; FX
monitoring (includes the detection of money laundering); monitoring of financial
indicators and solvency ratings, developed using the supervisor’s criteria.
As described in principle 31, Bovespa has a customer protection fund that may
compensate clients up to 70,000 BR for losses caused by a Bovespa member’s
misconduct. However this does not compensate for losses in government securities
or securities not listed or traded on Bovespa. The deposit protection fund of the
BCB only covers bank deposits. Bovespa as a CCP has the legal responsibility to
complete the settlement of open trades involving a defaulting intermediary.
As over 90% of the Brazilian securities industry (by assets and transactions) are
subsidiaries of banking conglomerates, which have liability for subsidiary
obligations, systemic risk does not appear to be significant.
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Assessment Broadly Implemented
Comments The BCB as the prudential regulator of the financial sector has comprehensive
authority to monitor the financial stability of all regulated entities. Its access to
detailed information on all financial instruments and positions on a one-day delay
basis provides it with the ability to independently monitor entities. It also has
broad powers to take prompt corrective action, including imposing limitations on
operations, suspension or termination of managers and board members and
emergency corrective action, including appointment of a receiver and or directing
liquidation of a failing entity.
Key question 3(b) of the IOSCO methodology pertains to the authority of a
regulator to direct a firm to transfer customer accounts. The BCB lacks this
authority. However, in critical situations in which it appoints a receiver to assume
control, the receiver may order customer accounts to be transferred.
Key question 3(d) concerns the availability of other methods of protecting client,
counterparty and systemic risk, such as client or settlement insurance or guarantee
funds. In this regard, there is an opportunity for improvement. While the Bovespa
clearance and settlement system is an official central counterparty that guarantees
all trades, CETIP is not an official CCP.
There is no comprehensive insurance fund for Brazil and firms are not required to
have comprehensive insurance or reserve funds for the protection of investors.
When the BCB takes action because a market intermediary is failing, its deposit
guarantee fund does not apply. The Bovespa investor protection fund is too limited
in the benefits it can provide, a maximum of 70,000 BR. Also it does not cover
losses involving government securities, a major component of investment
accounts. For these reasons there are inadequate resources to protect the clients of
a failing intermediary. The IOSCO Methodology provides that a broadly
implemented rating is appropriate if key question 3(d) is not satisfied.
Principles for the Secondary Markets
Principle 33. The establishment of trading systems including securities exchanges should be
subject to regulatory authorization and oversight.
Description In 2008 all Brazilian securities exchanges merged into a single securities exchange
BM&F Bovespa, which operates equities, options, commodities futures and
derivatives trading systems. In addition to Bovespa, CETIP is a licensed securities
registry and depository that provides order exposure, trade reporting and clearance
and settlement for government and private debt instruments. Bovespa and CETIP
are registered with CVM. CVM must review and approve all Bovespa and CETIP
rules and new products or services. BCB has similar authority with regard to
clearance, settlement and payment processing functions.
The Securities Act (6385/76, §109, §110) authorizes the CVM to issue licenses
and regulate exchanges and securities trading systems. CVM instruction 461
establishes CVM procedures and policies for licensing and regulating exchanges,
including types of activities, services and products.
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The CVM instruction provides qualifications standards for applicant exchanges
and risk control requirements. Article 42 requires exchanges to create a self-
regulatory department charged with supervising member compliance with CVM
and the exchange rules.
Instruction 461 also requires an exchange to establish rules governing guaranty
funds for clearance and settlement. Bovespa has a separate trade processing
guaranty fund for each of its four trading systems. Each fund currently has in
excess of 30 million BR. CETIP has a single guaranty fund of comparable size.
CETIP does not function as a CCP. Since it only clears and settles debt securities
that are on its registry and in its depository, it has limited exposure for trade
failures. CVM rules do not require Bovespa or CETIP to have arbitration or
dispute resolution procedures for client- member firm or member firm-member
firm disputes. Bovespa also has the 70,000BR per client per event customer
guaranty fund described previously.
CVM conducts on-site inspections of Bovespa and CETIP operations and requires
the self-regulatory programs at CETIP and Bovespa to report immediately any
serious violations or infractions and provide monthly reports on all violations or
failures to observe rules. An annual audit report must be submitted covering the
adequacy of exchange trading risk-management systems. CVM conducts annual
inspections, but does not inspect exchange trading algorithms and trade matching
systems.
However, the CVM may order a special audit if there is any indication that the
trading systems or methods are not operating properly.
CVM and Bovespa both have the authority to halt trading or suspend trading in a
security on an emergency basis. Bovespa also has a special procedure requiring a
special auction whenever there is an offer to sell or purchase a large block of a
listed stock, defined as 0.25% of free float for illiquid and 0.50% for liquid stocks.
The special auction may require a halt in trading of 5 minutes to one hour to alert
the market and submit bids. If a block is split into multiple trades, spanning more
than one day, Bovespa may cancel a previous day trade and direct an auction for
the entire amount.
CVM Instruction 461 (§ 28) requires a daily report on equity market transactions
submitted to the auction process and on all transactions cancelled; a report on the
open interest of individual positions in the futures and derivatives markets; and a
report containing the daily movement of transactions in each trading system.
Bovespa and CETIP maintain full audit trails of all transactions. These must be
kept for five years. The Bovespa system includes information on the member firm
executing the order and the client account of the member firm that submitted the
order. The information on the client account can only be accessed by Bovespa and
CVM.
CETIP is primarily a registry and depository of debt and OTC derivatives. As an
adjunct of its registry and depository services it provides order exposure, trade
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reporting and clearance and settlement services. It maintains an internal regulatory
department to monitor compliance with CETIP and CVM rules.
Assessment Broadly Implemented
Comments The broadly implemented assessment reflects several areas where further
improvement can be made. These include CVM oversight of trading software for
trade matching algorithms (Question 5.c.), and creation by Bovespa of a dispute
resolution system for members and for customers, other than the limited MRP
fund (Question 3.a.).
While not a basis for the rating of this principle, comment is made on Question
4.c. under this principle. This pertains to fair access to an exchange or trading
system. This is an issue that CVM is currently examining in the context of
possible new entrants in Brazil. CVM has commissioned an independent
consultant to prepare a report on access to services and competition issues in the
secondary market. The report is scheduled for completion in April 2012. The
CVM is to be commended for undertaking a thoughtful and independent
examination of the complex issues presented.
Principle 34. There should be ongoing regulatory supervision of exchanges and trading systems
that should aim to ensure that the integrity of trading is maintained through fair
and equitable rules that strike an appropriate balance between the demands of
different market participants.
Description CVM has the authority to review and approve all Bovespa and CETIP rules,
procedures and new products or services. Both organizations are required to
maintain internal regulatory oversight programs. Bovespa has created a wholly
owned subsidiary, BSM, to provide regulatory services, while CETIP has created
an internal department to do the same. Both must submit their annual work plan
and internal budget to CVM for review and approval. Bovespa has also created a
separate regulatory governing board to provide guidance and oversight to BSM.
CVM instruction 461 requires BSM and CETIP regulatory department to submit
reports regularly to CVM.
These include the following:
1. A daily report on:
a) Trades involving the auction process, including any cancelled trades;
b) Position balances in the future settlement market, indicating all long, short
and naked positions determined by brokerage houses, the positions of the own
portfolio apart from the ones pertaining to the clients; and
c) Futures and commodities exchanges daily movements of the floor system
and the electronic operations trading and registration systems, identifying
intermediaries and final investors.
2. A monthly report on:
a) Failures to comply with regulatory requirements in the securities market,
including the floor and electronic trading;
b) Completed inspections of member firms, including the scope of the
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finalized work, the period involved, the final result and the measures taken.
BSM has a real-time surveillance system for each of its four trading platforms.
Additionally, the CVM has in place an electronic system to carry out surveillance
of the trading with securities on Bovespa and CETIP. The system is designed to
detect trades considered atypical relating to its volume, price or liquidity. Bovespa
and CETIP staff focus on real-time surveillance and CVM focuses on prior day
trading patterns, although it also monitors in real-time.
CVM has the authority to investigate and sanction Bovespa and CETIP for any
violations of CVM rules or for failures to properly apply or enforce their own
rules.
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments As discussed in principle 33, Bovespa has a long-established procedure to require
special auctions whenever a large block is exposed for sale. This procedure may
have been appropriate at any earlier stage of market development when block
orders could disrupt market stability and liquidity and unfairly disadvantage
smaller traders. Because of the development of the Bovespa equity market, this
process may no longer promote market stability and liquidity. CVM should
consider directing Bovespa to reexamine whether a need for the special auction
process still exists.
Principle 35. Regulation should promote transparency of trading.
Description Bovespa has a fully electronic order exposure system that provides extensive
information on bids and offers and the depth of the open order book. High
frequency trading is beginning to play a role in Brazilian trading. However there
are no alternative trading systems or dark pools in Brazil so all trading including
HFT is fully transparent to the market.
CETIP is an OTC style, trade reporting system. There is limited pre-trade
transparency of indicative interest, primarily through third party commercial
sources (e.g. Bloomberg and Reuters).
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments Pre-trade order exposure on CETIP may warrant attention if the volume of OTC
trading in FIDCs and other instruments grows.
Principle 36. Regulation should be designed to detect and deter manipulation and other unfair
trading practices.
Description As described in principles 10 and 34, Bovespa, CETIP and CVM utilize
automated surveillance systems to monitor trading activity for the purpose of
detecting manipulative, deceptive or fraudulent activities. BSM and CETIP
regulation may conduct inquiries of questionable trades or trading patterns
involving member firms. If the inquiry pertains to activity by clients of members,
they will be referred to CVM for further inquiry and possible action.
The Bovespa audit trail provides detailed information on the identity of the firms
on both sides of the trade as well as the client accounts on both sides of the trade.
This information facilitates rapid investigation of suspicious activities.
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The Securities Law clearly prohibits the full range of market misconduct and
provides the CVM with sufficient authority to investigate and take action
If CVM concludes that violations occurred, the Securities Law (Law 6385/76,
§11) provides CVM with a range of enforcement sanctions, including money
fines, suspensions, disqualifications and license revocations.
As described in principle 15, the CVM has an extensive array of multilateral and
bilateral agreements to obtain and exchange information with foreign regulators
concerning cross-border activities. While the Bovespa does not have formal
information exchange agreements with foreign markets that trade ADRs on
Brazilian companies, the CVM has been able to obtain this information when
required.
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments There is a well-developed surveillance, investigation and enforcement program to
address market misconduct. Statistics on this are included in principle 12.
One open issue concerns the lack of a formal process for cross-market surveillance
of the commodities futures and commodities spot markets. The CVM is aware of
this issue, which is mentioned in principle 7 on perimeters of regulation. The
commodity futures market in Brazil is small relative to other parts of the
derivatives market and accordingly, this limitation doesn’t warrant a lower
assessment.
Principle 37. Regulation should aim to ensure the proper management of large exposures,
default risk and market disruption.
Description The Bovespa audit trail system provides full information on the clients and firms
on both sides of a trade simplifying surveillance of large activity. The existence in
the CSD of individual accounts for every beneficial owner provides even greater
information. Bovespa rules’ requiring special auctions for block trades enable the
exchange to exercise greater control over large exposures. There is no market
making in the equity markets and market intermediaries do not engage in
extensive proprietary trading, except in government securities by larger banks.
Finally there is no trading on margin accounts in the equity market and all short-
selling must be covered by borrowing shares from the Bovespa lending facility.
Moreover trading in the derivatives market entails significant daily collateral
requirements and cross margining across trading platforms is not possible. As a
result of these features, the potential for large exposures causing a risk of
widespread default or market disruption is very limited.
CM-TIMS calculates the total margin required for one investor’s portfolio,
considering his positions in both option and forward market as well as in the
securities lending program. The total margin is the sum of two components: the
Premium Margin (the market value of the position) and the Risk Margin (the
potential loss of the position).
In the Bovespa derivatives market initial and maintenance margin requirements
are determined by its proprietary CM-TIMS model. Margin compliance is
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determined once a day and marked-to-market daily. Exceptionally CBLC,
Bovespa’s CCP subsidiary, may request margin on intra-day basis.
CBLC maintains a Settlement Fund to guarantee the settlement of transactions
processed through its systems. There is currently approximately 30 million BR in
each of four settlement funds, one for each trading platform. This Fund is intended
to provide additional guarantee to CBLC since, as clearing agent, the member
brokerage house must pledge their seats on the exchange to BOVESPA and to
CBLC. This Fund will be used when a CBLC clearing agent fails to provide
collateral or to settle trades under its responsibility. If the defaulting firm is a
subsidiary of a bank, the bank would be liable for these losses.
Bovespa, through its stock lending facility, provides public information on the
extent of short selling in a security, including the aggregate volume borrowed in
every single share, as well as the securities available for lending (with quantities
and rates). This is updated every 15 minutes. Complete data on all the stock
lending activity is available on a daily basis for the CVM, including the
identification of the actual beneficiary owners. BSM monitors short selling.
Assessment Fully Implemented
Comments A variety of factors identified in the description of this principle make unlikely
that a large exposure default would be a catalyst for market disruptions. The CCP
appears to be sufficiently liquid to resolve any problems. The segregation of
securities at the CSD into individual beneficial accounts provides additional
protection, although it is possible that fraudulent conduct by an intermediary could
subvert this level of protection.
Principles Relating to Clearing and Settlement
Principle 38. Securities settlement systems and central counterparties should be subject to
regulatory and supervisory requirements that are designed to ensure that they are
fair, effective and efficient and that they reduce systemic risk.
Description As a part of this FSAP the settlement systems of Bovespa and CETIP were
assessed as part of a CPSS-IOSCO ROSC. This assessment has not been finalized.
However its tentative conclusions including findings that there is general
compliance by FMI with the CPSS-IOSCO principles.
Assessment Refer to CPSS-IOSCO Detailed Assessment Report.
Comments